Thursday, July 11, 2013

Plymouth GOP to nominate candidates for local offices


PLYMOUTH -- The Republican Town Committee will hold a caucus to nominate candidates for the offices of mayor, town council, town clerk, tax collector, treasurer, library trustees, Board of Finance, Board of Education, constables and Board of Assessment Appeals, in the Community Room of the Town Hall at 7 p.m. July 23.

All registered Republicans are invited to attend.

For information call Barbara K. Rockwell at 860-582-1194.

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Source: http://www.rep-am.com/news/local/doc51dd573db9bf0331934932.txt

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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Use PR to promote your organisation as an employer of choice ...

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Business group2Attracting the best talent to your business can be difficult especially if potential employees have never heard of your brand before.

Often potential employees will be attracted to a business with a good reputation in HR, available career opportunities, training initiatives and a culture that suits them.?

You can use PR strategies to inform potential employees about:

  1. What makes you different
    What can you offer potential employees your competitors don?t. This could be flexible work hours, a bonus scheme, training programs and more. PR can help you to promote this aspect of your business to inform potential employees why they should choose your business over others.
  2. Career opportunities
    Many potential employees are attracted to a business because they can see a potential career path within the organisation. It?s then a great idea to use PR to promote the training initiatives your business offers such as career development programs, support networks and more. Potential employees will then see how the business supports their career goals.
  3. Your company culture
    Attracting the right employees who fit into your company culture can be difficult. One way to make this process easier is to promote your company culture to attract the right employees.

PR can do these things by raising the profile of your business, improving your reputation and positioning you as an employer of choice. Tactics to achieve this include:

Media pitching
A media pitch is the technique of contacting a specific journalist to offer them an original story or an interview with someone in your business. A pitch is sent via email or over the phone and must explain why the story idea is suitable for the journalist?s publication and audience.

You can find story ideas within your business by thinking about what sets your business apart from your competitors and why employees would want to work with you. You should also think about the business? area of expertise and the topics you can discuss. You can then pitch these stories ideas to a relevant journalist and offer the appropriate spokesperson, like a HR Director to interview. By sharing the spokesperson?s expert knowledge and gaining media coverage you can build your brand awareness and position the business as a leader in its industry.

Case studies
Case studies are a great way to showcase your achievements, build your credibility and promote your business. A great example of a case study would be to document the success story of how one of your employees used your training initiative to develop their skills and progress into a higher position within the organisation.

You can publish the case study on your website, social media profiles, in relevant media publications, speaking opportunities and even use a link in job advertisements. A case study is a great way to build the business? brand and also show potential employees the opportunities you offer.

Enter HR awards
Your business can enter HR awards in categories such as best employer, best corporate culture, best employee training initiatives and more. If you are nominated or win you can promote your achievement to build your brand. You can do this by sending out a media release to relevant media, publishing it on social media, using the award logo on your marketing material and pitching your spokesperson as an expert to the media.?

If you don?t win it?s still a great exercise to reflect on the benefits you offer employees and to get a better understanding of your culture

Speaking opportunities
Your spokesperson or HR Director can speak at events or conferences your potential employees may attend. This helps to build the business? brand awareness as well as places the business in front of a large audience who may consider becoming employees or customers in the future.

The topics they can present on could be what makes a good workplace or strategies your business uses to train and develop employees.

If you would like the market to see your business as an employer of choice and attract the best talent, speak to a PR professional about how you can use PR to achieve this.

For a great example of how to use PR to raise the profile of an organisation as an employer of choice read our case study, ?The corporate side of Hilton Hotels?.

Source: http://publicrelationssydney.com.au/index.php/use-pr-to-promote-your-organisation-as-an-employer-of-choice/

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Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Aplicaciones Gratuitas para iPhone/iPad por Tiempo Limitado ? 7/07/13

Post de aplicaciones gratuitas por tiempo limitado del domingo d?a 7. Haciendo click en el t?tulo de la aplicaci?n acceder?s a iTunes para descargarlas, ?pueden haber dos enlaces, uno para iPhone y otro para iPad, haciendo click sobre las im?genes se ampliar?n List

Source: http://bitacoras.com/anotaciones/aplicaciones-gratuitas-para-iphone-ipad-por-tiempo-limitado-7-07-13/34096625

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Guy stealing from security cam installer caught by security cam (and Facebook)

Social media

17 hours ago

There are some people in this world from whom you just shouldn't steal. One thief learned this lesson the hard way when he nicked ladders from a man who installs closed-circuit television (CCTV) systems for a living. Unsurprisingly, there was damning CCTV footage of the crime ... and it made its way online.

"DOES ANY ONE RECOGNISE THIS MAN?" British IT guy Barrie Smith asked his Facebook friends in his post of CCTV footage showing a man removing what Smith described as "expensive work ladders" from outside his home in Weston Super Mare, Somerset, England. "I knew that the guy had to live locally as he carried the ladders off on foot and did not drive them away," Smith told NBC News.

It took about a week before the thief was identified. "When the police went to his house, he came to the door wearing the same [sweater] that he was wearing in the CCTV footage," Smith says. The sweater had a large, identifiable logo. The thief was let off with a caution, a formal warning, and Smith got his ladders back.

"I'm a bit disappointed that more was not done ? community service or something ? it seems to me he got off lightly," Smith says. "Granted I should not of left the ladders in the front garden but all the same it is not right that someone comes on to my property to steal them!" Still, Smith points out that he was quite lucky ? he'd only installed his own CCTV system about a week prior to the theft.

Want more tech news or interesting links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on Twitter, subscribing to her Facebook posts, or circling her on Google+.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2e601db1/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cguy0Estealing0Esecurity0Ecam0Einstaller0Ecaught0Esecurity0Ecam0Efacebook0E6C10A569795/story01.htm

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Joe Strupp: Major GOP Donor Gaining Monopoly Control Over Crucial Media Market

The conservative?Columbus?Dispatch?has long been a force in local and state politics?in Ohio. But in recent years, the newspaper's parent company has become a virtual media monopoly in Ohio's largest city and state capital, controlling not only the daily newspaper, but two radio stations, a television outlet and a long list of other weekly, monthly,?and regional news sources.

"It's a one-newspaper town," said Dominick Cappa, editor of?Columbus Business First,?one of the few local publications not owned by the?Dispatch.?"They have the TV station, a radio station. Are they powerful? Hell yeah they're powerful because they have those outlets."

And the?Dispatch's owners?have?used?that?media muscle to promote?conservative causes and candidates, in particular the state's Republican governor,?John Kasich. Publisher John F. Wolfe, CEO of parent company?Dispatch Printing,?and his wife, Ann,?have spent more than $100,000 seeking to elect Republicans in state and out, with three dollars out of every ten going to Kasich's coffers.

The?Dispatch's news reporting is the pride of Ohio; in recent years the paper has repeatedly been named the best newspaper of its size by the Associated Press Society, and its reporters typically clean up at that organization's annual awards presentation. In 2012, John Wolfe himself was given a special recognition award for "exemplary service to print journalism."

But critics say that the recent expansion of Dispatch Printing has created a near-monopoly in central Ohio, and point to the way the paper's editorial board has shielded Kasich to sound a note of alarm.?

The increasing influence of the Wolfes comes during a period in which several right-wing moguls have been seeking to use mainstream media outlets to influence the political debate.

In December?Media Matters?profiled?financier Douglas Manchester, a major Republican Party contributor who purchased the?San Diego Union-Tribune?and used it to cheerlead for right-wing politics and his own business interests. More recently, David and Charles Koch, major funders of the conservative movement, have reportedly considered?buying the Tribune Company's eight regional newspapers -- which include the?Los Angeles Times?and?Chicago Tribune?-- as part of their plan to shift the country to the right by investing in the media. Manchester has?also considered buying?the Tribune Company.

The Kochs also?financially support?the?Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, a non-profit organization whose?websites and affiliates?provide free statehouse reporting from a conservative perspective to local newspapers?and other media?across the country.

The Wolfes' stranglehold on central Ohio's?media grew substantially last September when the Dispatch Printing Company?took over?Columbus Media Enterprises from American Community Newspapers. That purchase added 12 specialty magazines to its arsenal, including?Columbus Monthly?and?Columbus CEO, and?Columbus Bride; Suburban News Publications, a string of 22 community weeklies?that were subsequently merged?with the company's 22-paper ThisWeek Community News group of weeklies; and The Other Paper, a feisty alternative weekly that had been known as a?Dispatch?watchdog.

Dispatch Printing?already owned a variety of?specialty publications?including?Columbus Alive,?Columbus Crave,?Columbus Parent, and?Capital Style, along with two radio stations, the local CBS television affiliate (WBNS-TV),?Ohio News Network Radio,?which provides regular newscasts and sportscasts to 73 radio stations statewide, and Consumer News Services, a marketing company that distributes insert fliers via direct delivery bags.

Columbus has three other?network television affiliates:?WCMH, the NBC affiliate owned by Media General; WSYX, the ABC affiliate, and WTTE, the Fox affiliate, both owned by Sinclair Broadcasting.

But critics say that those outlets amount to little more than window dressing.?"There is no competition," said Gerald Kosicki, a 26-year professor of communications at nearby Ohio State University.?"You do only now have one voice. That is a concern to people."

The concern in Columbus increased earlier this year when Dispatch Printing?closed?The Other Paper,?silencing?perhaps?its biggest critic.

"That is important in that?The Other Paper?was a real alternative voice in the community, many of us are sorry to see it go,"?said Kosicki. "The Other Paper?had a reputation for dealing with stories about the?Dispatch?... kind of watching the watchdog kind of role ... we certainly won't have that in Columbus anymore, it is really a loss to the community."

"The sad thing is that we cannot in a city this size sustain alternate outlets," said Ann Fisher, a talk show host at WOSU Public Radio in Columbus and a former 10-year?Dispatch?staffer, who also wrote a column for the paper.?"The monopoly is unfortunate. They basically control everything."

But Dispatch Printing Chief Marketing Officer Phil Pikelny, a company executive since 2004, claims the monopoly is not as bad as people assume.

"Because of all of the other TV stations, the Internet, people can easily vote with their money," he said, noting there are other outlets. "And we are still one of the largest subscription newspapers."

Dispatch?editor Ben Marrison also defended the paper's work, stating in an email, "I am confident that our reporting and editing is as professional as you will find." He later added, "[I]t's worth noting that the?Dispatch?has won more journalism awards in this state than any other metro in the past five years, including multiple awards for being the state's best newspaper. Clearly, our peers wouldn't recognize our work with these awards if we were a biased news organization."

But those who monitor national media issues say such local monopolies can be problematic.

"Quietly, we're seeing a new wave of consolidation in news," said Tom Rosenstiel, executive director of the American Press Institute and a co-founder of the Committee of Concerned Journalists. "A lot of it less visible or less obvious than a generation ago."

Jean-Philippe?Tremblay, a filmmaker and producer of the 2012 documentary,?Shadows of Liberty, about?the dangers of media consolidation and control, said such local news control is among the most dangerous.

"It is very sad," he said in an interview. "That is where information begins and where people can begin to become informed through local news, localism. That is where we really make decisions about our lives and run our lives, schools, our community is where it begins."

The Wolfe?family,?currently?headed by Publisher John F. Wolfe, has owned the?Dispatch?-- which opened in 1871 - since 1905.?Wolfe and his wife Ann?have?contributed at least?$112,750?since 1997 to numerous?Republican political campaigns and candidates as the newspaper editorializes and reports on the same public officials, according to a?Media Matters?search of the Center for Responsive Politics and National Institute on Money in State Politics databases.

The primary recipient of that largesse is?Ohio's Republican governor, John Kasich,?a former Columbus area congressman who won the governor's race in 2010 and faces re-election next year.?The Wolfes have donated at least $33,750 to support?Kasich's campaigns and political action committee.?

That support dates back to the late 1990s, when the then-chairman of the House Budget Committee was exploring a run for the presidency. Discussing Kasich's presidential hopes in a 1998 article, the famed?New York Times?reporter R.W. Apple cited as a strength his "base among the rich and powerful of Columbus" - a base which included Wolfe. Indeed, in 1997 and 1998, the Wolfes would give $22,750 to Kasich's campaign and political action committee. Ann also?served?as "a leading central?Ohio?fund-raiser for?Kasich's?Pioneer PAC," according to a?Dispatch?story.

Kasich's presidential campaign floundered and he dropped out of the race in July 1999. With Kasich taking roles in the private sector and on Fox News over the next decade, the Wolfes' support necessarily flagged. But when Kasich sought the governor's office in 2010, he had their support; they combined for $6,000 for his 2010 run and another $5,000 so far for his reelection.

Other current and former?Ohio?members of Congress, including John Boehner, Deborah Price, Ralph Regula, Steve Stivers, Patrick Tiberi, have also received checks from the Wolfes, as has former Sen. Mike Dewine. In the 2012 election cycle, the Wolfes combined for $25,000 in donations to Mitt Romney and the Republican National Committee.

Michael Curtin, a former?Dispatch?editor who won a seat in the?Ohio?State House of Representatives last year, is the sole Democrat to receive the Wolfes' support, bringing in $2,500 from the publisher in 2012.

A request for comment from Wolfe's office was referred to Pikelny, who said of the political contributions: "There is no daily, monthly, weekly meeting that we have to discuss what the initiatives of the publisher are, that's just the way he is as an individual."

Asked if such political dealings may?hurt the paper's credibility,?Pikelny added, "We're privately owned and part of being privately owned, the person who owns it, how they operate is their concern because they are privately owned."

In 2010, the "person who owns it" wanted Kasich elected.?And the?Dispatch?editorial board did too, offering up an?endorsement?that?praised Kasich as a "leader who can inspire hope and not simply cope" with "the personality, the drive?and the backbone" to rebuild the state's economy, and criticized then-Gov. Ted Strickland for having "run a campaign largely based on character attacks against Kasich instead of offering?Ohio?a vision for the future."

Since the Republican's 2010 victory, some pro-Kasich editorials have come under fire.?"It's clear that the editorial page is pretty, pretty right-wing," Kosicki said. "They do really take the Tea Party or are often really on the GOP line."

In May 2011, Rep. Armond Budish, the?Ohio?House minority leader and a Democrat,?wrote in to?the paper to take issue with an?editorial?that had lauded Kasich for the "remarkable achievement" of his budget. The?Dispatch?editorial board had praised Kasich for putting?Ohio?on a "sounder fiscal footing" while castigating Budish for having tried to stand in the Republican's way.

"Blind partisan affection can impair one's vision of reality," wrote Budish in his response. "That?can be the only explanation for the?Sunday?Dispatch?editorial 'Well done,' which gushed with affection for Gov. John Kasich's budget while turning a blind eye to several key realities."

Meanwhile, several other?Ohio?newspapers, including?The Cincinnati Inquirer,?The Blade?of Toledo, and the?Akron Beacon-Journal, offered considerably more skepticism of the plan at the time,?pointing out that Kasich's plan largely shifted the burden to local governments, maintained unbalanced tax cuts, and slashed?spending to the bone. "They've always been a conservative paper, that is not a crime in America," said Dale Butland, spokesman for the progressive Innovation?Ohio?and a one-time aide to former Sen. John Glenn.?"But it wasn't gonzo, completely in the tank for one party. There has been a sort of a shift."

He pointed to the?Dispatch's treatment of JobsOhio, a controversial program created in 2012 under the?Ohio?Department of Economic Development as a private corporation. Created by Gov. John Kasich's office, it receives funding from the sale of state bonds through liquor profits, but has been exempt from open records laws.

Butland said such secrecy drew concerns from most newspapers statewide, including a number of them who editorialized as part of?Sunshine Week?in March against the?exemption. But the?Dispatch?did not.

"Every paper in the state except the?Dispatch?used their Sunshine Week editorial to point to JobsOhio as a great example of why we need Sunshine laws, even though it was their own reporter who broke the story," Butland said. "This editorial page has become an absolute shill for the Republican Party."

Media Matters?has documented?numerous?other editorial page?misrepresentations, hypocritical claims and outright?misinformation.

But Pikelny claims the editorial page only reflects the ownership's views, as it should.

"We really have in the family who owns the newspaper, an editorial point of view in the newspaper and it is definite and specific," he said. "But that really hasn't crept into the reporting."

Still, some staffers contend the far-right editorial page is hurtful to the paper's image.

"It is no secret that the paper, editorially, is a big Republican paper," said one?Dispatch?staffer who requested anonymity fearing reprisals from the paper. "It doesn't surprise me that they give added significance to Kasich stories."

Adds another?Dispatch?scribe, "There are a lot of people who can't distinguish between the editorial page and the news page."

Photo by?Gabe Taviano?used under a Creative Commons license.

Source: http://feeds.mediamatters.org/~r/MediaMattersForAmerica-CountyFair/~3/ayfv3FAVb4E/194753

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10 Healthy Tips for Fitness Success - Top Personal Trainer in London

10 Healthy Tips for Fitness SuccessConsistency is the most important factor in any exercise program, and most of the people lose their interest in fitness within the first three months. However, those who stick to their exercise program and make it their habits are rewarded with a perfectly shaped stunning body after four months. It takes about four months to get results from your fitness exercise, and once you get the expected results you will certainly stick with your exercise program.

The 10 simple tips are described below to keep you motivated and interested in your exercise program, leading to fitness success:

  1. Get Moving: You should make up your mind to remain active by regularly doing various physical activities and achieve the required flexibility, strength and cardiovascular capacity.
  2. Prime the Pump: You should have strong determination to take part in physical activities that involve a large number of muscle groups of the body.
  3. Let the Muscles Respond:? You should be determined to challenge your muscles and force them to respond by regular resistance exercise or weight lifting.
  4. Loosen Up: You should remain determined to stretch regularly, whether before, after or during the exercise. You should regularly use the full range of motions to give a complete stretch to your muscles.
  5. Win the Losing Game: You should be strongly determined to maintain the appropriate body weight.? As the general rule, you should eat less and exercise more to burn the extra fat for losing weight. However, weight is not something that you can lose instantly, and therefore, you should act moderately when it comes to eating less and exercising more so that you don?t harm yourself.
  6. Watch What You Eat: You should have strong determination to eat healthy food. ?Good health comes from good nutrition, and good nutrition means the food you are eating contains sufficient ?nutrients to support your body.
  7. Chill Out: You should have strong determination to accept things in your life in right perspective. You should properly understand the things in life you can control and should never stress yourself regarding the factors which are beyond your control.? You must learn to accept the change as an opportunity rather than perceiving as a threat.
  8. Get Plenty of Rest: You must resolve to sleep well.? You must get at least that much sleep which allows you to remain alert, feel refreshed and have good spirits the next day.? Good Sleep is extremely important as it allows the body to rest and restore both physical and mental health.
  9. Focus on the Task at Hand:? You should make a strong determination to stick to your fitness schedule and exercise regularly. Your consistency will bring good results. You should focus on the muscles being exercised at the moment rather than concentrating the motions.
  10. Understand that there can be no such thing as a Free Lunch: You must make a strong determination to maintain rational lifestyle practices. For example, you should maintain appropriate body fat and avoid smoking, magic potion, latest fitness and diet fads and other gadgets, which claim miraculous properties. ?These are just scams, and you need to consider them as such.

Source: http://www.slimmerfitterstronger.com/blog/10-healthy-tips-for-fitness-success/

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Russian Troops on American Soil

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Source: http://www.popmodal.com/video/16964/Russian-Troops-on-American-Soil

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