Headquartered in New York with more

By admin July 31st, 2010, under Uncategorized

Headquartered in New York with more than 60 offices on six continents, Kroll has a multidisciplinary corps of more than 2,200 employees and serves a global clientele of law firms, financial institutions, corporations, nonprofit institutions, government agencies, and individuals. Over the last three years, Kroll has developed a unique solution for victims of identity theft. This new service is now available to Pre-Paid Legal members through the IDENTITY THEFT SHIELD benefit.

What does this benefit provide our members?

The Identity Theft Shield gives you easy access to the resources you need to understand your credit ratings and to fight back if an identity thief threatens your financial standing. This benefit is designed to alert you to suspicious account activity, to restore any resulting damage to your credit history and to reimburse you for covered out-of-pocket expenses you may incur in the process.

1. Credit Report Through Experian

Make sure your financial records are accurate.

Your credit standing is one of your most important financial assets. It not only affects your ability to get credit, it often dictates the interest rate at which you can borrow. It can also affect your ability to purchase insurance or to find employment.
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JobsDB enhances portal

By admin July 31st, 2010, under Uncategorized
JobsDB enhances portal

0 Comments | New Straits Times, Jul 30, 2010

ONLINE recruitment portal JobsDB.com has launched RMS Dashboard, a new feature that makes it easier for recruiters to look at multiple resumes, among others.

The RMS Dashboard in the upgraded Recruitment Management System contains a whole host of technically advanced features, enabling recruiters to perform multiple tasks on a split-screen without the annoying page changes.

It enables recruiters to open attachments without the need to download, import resumes, and have private applicant database and customisable folders.

This allows companies to review job applicants better.

“We are always exploring new ways and innovative approach to our features,” said Jeffrey Goh, general manager of JobsDB.com Malaysia, in a statement yesterday.

medical recruitment

He thus produced what the rest of

By admin July 31st, 2010, under Uncategorized

He thus produced what the rest of the dog world considered a “crossbreed”. However, the good looks and personality of the dog won over the hearts of many and it soon became popular not only in Germany but throughout Europe. The dog has the web foot typical of the Newfoundland and the burly good humor of both the Newf and the Saint, while the Pyrenean Mountain dog contributed some herding and guarding instinct. The Leonberger very nearly became extinct during the World Wars. Great Britain and the United States imported dogs of the German strain and continued to breed this distinctly different dog. It has since become registered by all of the European Kennel clubs. Registry in the American Kennel Club has begun with the first step being recognition by the F.S.S.
pet care

If you do and are

By admin July 31st, 2010, under Uncategorized

If you do and are fortunate you can bank your severance and land in a new role with a halo around your head.

Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter, is Managing Director with Concepts in Staffing, a New York search firm, He has successfully assisted many corporations identify management leaders and staff in technology, accounting, finance, sales, marketing and other disciplines since 1971. He is a certified leader of the ManKind Project, a not for profit organization that assists men with life issues, and a practicing psychotherapist.

To receive a daily digest of positions emailed to you or Jeff’s free job search ezine, Head Hunt Your Next Job, go to http://www.jeffaltman.com For information about Jeff’s personal search agent service, go to http://vippersonalsearch.com

If you would like Jeff and his firm to assist you with hiring staff, or if you would like help with a strategic job change, send an email to him at jeffaltman@cisny.com (If you?re looking for a new position, include your resume)..
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Pilot and The Ledger-Star, Norfolk, VA – court house cafe was a cut above

By admin July 31st, 2010, under Uncategorized
court house cafe was a cut above

0 Comments | The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star, Norfolk, VA, Mar 29, 2009 | by LORRAINE EATON

By Lorraine Eaton

The Virginian-Pilot

First stop on the prime rib tour:

Coinjock Marina and Restaurant

If you’ve journeyed to the Outer Banks via U.S. 158, you’ve probably seen the sign for this 50-year-old restaurant. It’s perched on the Intracoastal Waterway about 30 miles south of the Virginia line. In the spring and fall, elegant yachts and sailboats tie up here. Seafarers and landlubbers alike come in waves for the prime rib.

“World Famous,” the menu says.

Since we’d be assessing three prime rib restaurants in a single night, testers bypassed the colossal 32-ounce Captain’s Cut in favor of the more petite, 6-ounce Princess Cut.

This is a cozy place, with a wall of windows on the water side and blond wood covering the rest of the walls, which are adorned with pictures of various vessels. While we sipped iced tea, a long, black barge passed by, pushed by a big green tug named the Albemarle
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Review / Pittsburgh Tribune – Review – Mortgage rates drop to new low

By admin July 29th, 2010, under Uncategorized
Mortgage rates drop to new low

0 Comments | Tribune – Review / Pittsburgh Tribune – Review, Jul 9, 2010

Mortgage rates fell for the second straight week to the lowest point in five decades. But many people either don’t qualify for new mortgages or have already taken advantage of the low rates this year.

As a result, the housing market and the broader economy may not benefit much from the lower rates.

The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage dropped to 4.57 percent this week, mortgage company Freddie Mac said Thursday. That’s down from the previous record low of 4.58 percent set last week.

It’s the lowest since Freddie Mac began tracking rates in 1971. The last time rates were lower was in the 1950s, when most long- term home loans lasted just 20 or 25 years.

Rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to an average of 4.07 percent, up from 4.04 percent last week
fixed home loan

Western retailer headed to Automobile Alley in OKC

By admin July 29th, 2010, under Uncategorized
Western retailer headed to Automobile Alley in OKC

Journal Record, The (Oklahoma City), May 10, 2010 by April Wilkerson

Automobile Alley is preparing to welcome a retailer that will bring a new flair to the area.

Rawhide, a high-end Western furniture, apparel and accessories store in Norman, is preparing to move to 1007 N. Broadway Ave. in Oklahoma City. Angie Bailey, owner, said she’s making the move for several reasons: Her in-state customers are from Edmond and Oklahoma City, plus she wants to be a part of the growth in downtown Oklahoma City. She plans to open by July 1.

“I wanted to jump on what’s going on in downtown Oklahoma City,” she said. “This will be a lot better for local people.”

But local residents don’t constitute the majority of Rawhide’s customers. Bailey estimates that 90 percent of her clientele is out of state and comes from advertisements she places in Cowboys & Indians magazine.

“I’m a destination store,” she said. “It’s not what you’ll see in your average Western store. Our customers want what they want, and price is not an issue. It’s finding what they want.”

Women’s Western apparel is Bailey’s top seller. She also carries belts, buckles, jewelry, rugs and furniture. She works with suppliers around the nation to find the pieces she knows her customers want, she said. And as an interior designer, she’s had input into her fall collection, which will feature pieces that are more authentic than what she’s carried in the past: an Indian dress with fringes, a leather shirt that could be worn as a jacket, Western gauntlet gloves, and moccasins made from bison.

“People love things that are more authentic,” she said, “but they’re a little modernized so people can wear them today.”

Bailey started Rawhide in 2007 after retiring as a furniture representative. She was always traveling out of state to find the “ranch lifestyle” clothing she wanted, so she decided to open a store and stock it with the items she liked.

With the move, she’s adding space: Her 2,650 square feet in Norman will grow to 5,300 square feet in Automobile Alley. With the extra room, she plans to add more furniture and devote more of her resources to interior design work. She estimates her business will increase by 10 times.

Steve Mason, owner of the historic building she will occupy and a member of the Automobile Alley Association board, said Rawhide’s high-end merchandise and her status as a destination store is a boon to the area.

“This is an important step forward for retail in the downtown business district, particularly Automobile Alley,” Mason said. “I expect the value of her inventory will be the largest value of any retailer in downtown Oklahoma City.”

Mason also has gone through the process to place the building on the National Register of Historic Places
automobile accessories

Have you ever sat in

By admin July 29th, 2010, under Uncategorized

Have you ever sat in church and wondered with all your church activities over the years, whether you have really grown in Christ or not? Have you really matured over the years since you became active in your own church? I started to become active in my church in 1958 just after my marriage to my first wife. I basically sat there taking in all the surroundings, and absorbing all that was fed to me along the way and becoming more and more active in church activities. I became a Deacon, an Elder, a Treasurer, and Chairman of many committees along the way. But after about ten years of this, I felt something was missing. I felt that there was something superficial about this congregation. We would talk about the weather, about what we did last week, and maybe about what we felt about other people. But we never seemed to talk about personal stuff, about what we felt about ourselves to each other, or how we really felt about other people and empathetically communicating this directly to them. In other words, we didn’t seem to be moving in our growth.
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Tourism project shortlisted

By admin July 29th, 2010, under Uncategorized

Tourism project shortlisted

0 Comments | Western Morning News, The, Aug 21, 2009

A PROJECT designed to encourage people to visit South East Cornwall has been shortlisted for a national award.

The Devon and Cornwall Rail Partnership has collaborated with the National Trust to encourage people to visit the charity’s Cotehele estate by taking the Tamar Valley Line from Plymouth to Calstock, followed by a scenic walk along the river of just over a mile.

In addition to some 60,000 leaflets that have been distributed as far as London Paddington station, there are also posters and a map with a descriptive board placed at Calstock station to inform the public.

The project has been shortlisted in the 2009 National Community Rail Awards.

Charmian Saunders, visitor services manager at Cotehele near Saltash, said: “We are very excited to be working with the Rail Partnership and that the project has been recognised nationally.

“Reducing our environmental footprint is hugely important to the National Trust and this partnership is another step towards that.

“Any visitors arriving by train will receive a discount into the house and garden, so not only are our visitors keeping fit but they are also saving money.”

The Tamar Valley Line runs from Plymouth to Gunnislake seven days a week, with an off-peak ticket from Plymouth to Calstock costing Pounds 4.40 for adults, Pounds 2.20 for children 5-15, and children under five going free.

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Highway – Engineering matchmaker

By admin July 29th, 2010, under Uncategorized
Engineering matchmaker

OEM Off-Highway, May/Jun 2010 by EauClaire, Michelle

San Diego-based online engineering network creator, Industriai Interface Inc. helps engineers find the perfect supplier or solution provider, fast. by Michelle EauClaire

Social networks began as ways to bring together high-school friends and peers into subdivided groupings of commonality. They have since evolved from student-oriented, friend network programs to become powerful tools to connect businesses to clients, customers to products, and employees to industry.

Published books and guides help businessmen and women navigate Facebook, Twitter, Linkedln and the like, to learn how to utilize social media to increase web traffic, grow profits and streamline practices.

T. Brian Iones, president, co-founder and former manufacturing engineer, has done just that: streamlined the engineering pro duct development process through amanufacturingnetworkcalledlndustrial Interface, Inc., based in San Diego, CA.

The site (www.industrialinterface.com) allows engineers and sourcing professionals to post projects, problems, or sourcing needs to the website. The posts include project details, technical specs, supplier requirements and other important information related to the specific solution needed. Once a post is submitted, the company’s software identifies and contacts dozens- or sometimes hundreds of relevant suppliers who can review it, pass it along to the appropriate person and then pay to offer a solution to the engineer. All the while the engineer remains anonymous until a solution provider pays for his information to ensure only credible solutions are offered for the project.

The Aha! moment

The idea for Industrial Interface came ab out while Jones was working as a design engineer for a sporting goods manufacturer and received word from the factory floor that the grip tape the company was using was failing on their product. It was Jones’ job to find a new adhesive to solve the problem. “It seemed pretty simple,” he notes. “I started contacting suppliers; I went through all of the standard listings, looked at websites, went through current suppliers, and couldn’t find anything that could meet all of the specs we had. I ended up contacting probably 100 companies all over the world, explaining my project over and over again, and every tape we were testing was failing.”

Later, as Jones was discussing his adhesive problem with friend and former industrial sales engineer (and now co-founder of Industrial Interface) Chris Powell, “[Chris] looked at me and said, ‘How do you not know that I design, manufacture and sell custom adhesive tape?’” It was then that Jones andPowell realized there was a need to improve, simplify and streamline the approach to finding solutions for manufacturing proj ects.

The system

Jones says, “Our technology combines human experience with an increasingly intelligent matching system. We’ve seen suppliers and engineers interacting minutes after projects have been posted to our site. A process that currently can take weeks and dozens of phone calls is now happening in a few hours on our site.”

While the system will work for any manufacturing industry (the five cofounders have worked with engineers in industries such as medical, aerospace, electronics, and automotive), the team would like to focus on electro-mechanical design, which happens to be some of the founders’ backgrounds.

“We are extremely familiar with [electro-mechanical manufacturing] projects,” explains Jones. “It’s our ideal market because every time an OEM does something, even if they are buying or designing similar systems or products, they’re always tweaking them and needing custom products and solutions. That’s where our system becomes really valuable because you can share all of those custom technical specs and get unique solutions from suppliers.”

The system will work for simply quoting off-the-shelf products, but Jones and his team are building it for the original research and development (R&D) engineer. “Being engineers ourselves, we really wanted to help with that initial research effort by the engineer, because you’re lost in a sea of suppliers. You may have never worked on a project before, but what we’re realizing is there are suppliers who have solved the exact problem you’re trying to solve before, for another company, and they are ready to jump in and say, ‘Here’s the solution we’ve offered in the past, let’s see how it works for you.’”

In relation to a company’s bottom line, Jones feels that the R&D process is when engineers have the most opportunity to save money. If the right supplier can get the right parts to engineers early in the design phase, down the road the purchasing department doesn’t have to find another option and retest, redesign or remanufacture.

The future

The Industrial Interface team is working to expand the site to include basic project collaboration and management