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    Brother Pt1290 Home And Office


    2012 - 02.22

    Brother PT1290 Home and Office Labeler

    Brother PT1290 Home and Office Labeler

    • 15 Deco Mode Patterns to create extra-stylish and decorative labels
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    • Six auto formats and seven framing options
    • Easy-view, 15-character LCD display

    Home and Office Labeler. New, sleek white colorNew, sleek white color. Easy-view, 15-character LCD display. Handheld design with Typewriter style keyboard. Uses laminated “TZ” series tapes up to 0.5″ wide. Operates on 6 “AAA” batteries (not included).

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    The Trial of Theodore Parker – For the “Misdemeanor” of a Speech in Faneuil Hall against – Kidnapping, before the Circuit Court of the United States, – at Boston, April 3, 1855, with the Defence

    The Trial of Theodore Parker - For the

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    Sally Coffelt Circuit Court


    2012 - 02.21

    Sally Coffelt is the current Lake County Circuit Court Clerk. Sally Coffelt said she’ll retire and many residents want her to, due to lack of modernization. Sally Coffelt is being challenged in Lake County by Cynthia Pruim Haran.
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    The Paper Chase Managing Files


    2012 - 02.20
    Circuit Court
    by Tony the Misfit

    The Paper Chase: Managing Files With Radio Frequency Identification Technology in Government

    RFID can solve the problem of locating and securing files, improving government service delivery and worker productivity and saving the taxpayer money.

    Introduction: The Paper Chase

    We?ve all seen it. Despite our push for ?paperless offices? and the wonders of pdf files and the ability to store and back-up terabytes of information, all our work, all our projects, and indeed, all our lives, often come down to the ability to find a simple folder ? the one that is critical to us at the time. For all government agencies ? from giant federal departments in Washington, DC to the police departments in the smallest communities ? manila folders are omnipresent, central to how they operate ? even in the era of e-Government. File a claim, there?s a folder. Make a complaint, there?s a folder. Need a project approved, there?s a folder. Commit a crime, there?s a folder. You get the picture.

    The Real Cost of Lost Files

    File management is a critical issue for any public sector agency to operate effectively. And much of the time, government workers are unable to find the file they need when they need it, causing not just a headache for the staff but, more importantly, a service delivery failure that can have very real consequences and costs for citizens. Recent studies have shown that the average public sector office worker spends several hours each week simply searching for critical files and documents. In fact, current estimates say file searching consumes between 8% and 12% of the average employee?s workday ? costing taxpayers billions of dollars in lost productivity of government workers. Indeed, one analyst categorized the situation as one of ?naked inefficiency,? as not only is there wasted productivity, but also additional costs incurred from having to recreate lost files and litigation stemming from lost files. And this is in normal times. In the past few years, we have also had high profile reminders that both negligent acts of humans and ?acts of God? can wreak havoc with government file management.

    According to an October 2006 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, staff in fourteen of the busiest district offices of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) had lost track of well over 100,000 files of non-US citizens. These fourteen offices not only handle over two-thirds of all non-citizen naturalization cases, but also maintain files on all individuals detained at the US border. The problem was so bad that an audit of the agency?s San Diego district office found that over 20% of the district?s files were not in the location shown in the computerized file management system. The report uncovered the fact that US citizenships had been granted to over 30,000 individuals whose files had been lost in the USCIS system, including at least one man with documented ties to the Islamic militant group Hezbollah. This caused a firestorm of controversy on Capitol Hill, with Susan Collins (R-Maine) calling it ?unthinkable? that the US would grant citizenship to a potential terrorist ?simply because they can?t find the person?s file.?

    The District of Columbia?s Disability Compensation Program has a long-standing problem with file mismanagement, causing injured workers? claims to be delayed for years at a time and prompting a class action suit that cost the municipal government millions in 2005. In an expose in the Washington City Paper, Muranda Willis, an injured school bus driver who had to fight the agency for five years to receive compensation from a severe accident, commented: ?You just don?t know how low and dirty these people are. I mean, they put my file in a corner. The [claims representative] told me, ?Oh, your file was in a corner. It had dust on it!? Laughing. And I didn?t think that was funny.

    Losing Track of the Paper Trail

    In April 2005, Samuel R. ?Sandy? Berger, President Clinton?s former National Security Adviser, pleaded guilty to surreptitiously removing and intentionally destroying original, uncopied classified documents and reports from the National Archives and Records Administration. These records dealt with the Clinton Administration?s handling of terrorism and Bin Laden, and experts contend that Berger?s actions ? sneaking out the documents under his pants and socks on several visits to the National Archives ? hampered the ability of the 9/11 Commission?s investigation into the President Clinton?s response to the looming terrorism threat prior to January 2001.

    In the aftermath of the September 11th attacks on the World Trade Center, the loss of paper files proved to have long-standing consequences. The Internal Revenue Service Regional Council in New York City (housed in World Trade Center Building 7, which was the third building to collapse on 9/11) lost its paper files, setting back numerous investigations being conducted out of the IRS?s New York office. Likewise, the US Secret Service had its largest field office sited in Building 7, with more than 200 employees, all of whom survived the attack.

    Hurricane Katrina wreaked havoc on the justice system across not just New Orleans, but the Mississippi Coast as well. In both areas, not only were court records and evidence files destroyed by the storm surge flooding, but with many private attorneys losing all of their case files to high water, the court systems are still recovering. In many cases, criminal cases ? including charges of murder, rape and robbery ? have had to be dropped against defendants or plea deals have had to be negotiated to lesser charges, due to the inability to locate key files and evidence in the wake of the storm.

    Tracking of Key Importance

    All of this points to the critical importance for government agencies to have accurate file management systems in place to enable staff to have knowledge of where a file is at any given moment. Today, pioneers in the public sector are building upon the file management practices being established in the legal community to use RFID to better manage their ?sea of manila folders.? Due to the critical nature of file management in their operations, law firms have begun using systems from 3M, FileTrail, and other vendors to manage the flow of files throughout their offices. Using passive RFID tags attached to file folders and readers located at desks and doorways of offices, such RFID-based systems can keep accurate inventory of file locations and pinpoint the location of needed files in an instant. Law firms that have implemented such systems have seen dramatic reductions in the time and manpower required to manage and audit files and to locate missing case folders, making the ROI on such installations quite attractive ? usually within a year. In doing so, they have largely eliminated the ?missing file conundrum,? helping to gain buy-in from sometimes skeptical attorneys who see their own jobs made better through the systems.

    In the public sector, the most important development to date has been the General Services Administration (GSA) awarding of a five-year schedule contract to 3M. This GSA schedule award means that federal agencies can purchase 3M?s RFID File-Tracking System at a low price, and without having to go through a bidding process with multiple vendors. To date, three federal agencies have done so. These are the US Department of Justice, the US Tax Court, and the Idaho National Laboratories.

    For example, the US Tax Court wanted to improve the way it tracks more than 100,000 case files, along with its library of periodicals and books. In the Tax Court?s application, staffers began by applying 3M?s 13.56 MHz, 2-by-2-inch passive RFID labels on each file folder, periodical and book the court wanted to track. The labels are embedded with tags containing Texas Instruments? Tag-It chip. Encoded to each tag is a unique ID linked to information about the attached file, periodical or book. This data is stored in the 3M file-tracking software.

    The Tax Court?s system works in a manner similar to that of a library. A staff member looking to check out a file or other media provides an RFID personnel card to a fixed-position interrogator, located in the filing area or library, presenting the items to be checked out. Those items are then linked to that staff member in the 3M tracking software, which other personnel can access to see who might have particular items. Tax Court workers use a handheld 13.56 MHz interrogator to take inventory of all tagged file folders, books and periodicals in the court. The collected tag IDs are downloaded to the tracking software, which generates a list of tags not read yet not checked out by staff.

    The court can then set the handheld interrogator to seek out these IDs during a second inspection of the filing area and library. With the twin pushes for greater file security and improved citizen service, along with the success to date of these first implementations and the ease of purchasing the 3M system through the GSA contract, we should expect to see wide-scale growth of such RFID-based file tracking systems in the federal government over the next few years.

    Implementation on a Local Scale

    At the state and local levels, we are also seeing early implementations across the US, with innovative executives looking to RFID-based file tracking of ?mission critical? files. At the local level, most of the reported implementations of such RFID-based file tracking have been in the judicial area. In Marin County, California, just outside of San Francisco, the District Attorney?s Office had a seemingly intransigent problem with case files that would go missing. York Westgate, the senior technology support analyst for the agency, estimated that they were spending 2,000-3,000 man-hours each year simply tracking down files. He commented that: ?We knew instinctively we were losing files?We?d have two or three e-mail blasts a day asking if we had seen a specific file. I knew there had to be a way technology could help and yet not be too costly or difficult to implement.?

    With limited resources, Westgate had to find a solution that was not only cost-effective, but would be compatible with the county?s complex database program used by many law enforcement organizations in the county. After implementing the 3M system, Westgate reports: ?Our benefits are primarily peace of mind, but there are definitely financial gains, including not having to dedicate personnel to file searching. Now I get only one or two e-mails a week asking about a file?s whereabouts, instead of several inquiries a day.?

    Likewise, in Prince George?s County, Maryland (suburban Washington, DC), the Seventh Judicial Circuit Court has implemented a system from FileTrail to track its case files, which number up to 40,000 annually. Now, with successful implementation in this circuit, the County is looking at implementing the FileTrail system in other circuits.

    Florida State University in Tallahassee has recently become the first educational institution to implement RFID-based file tracking, as its Office of Sponsored Research and Sponsored Research Accounting Services has installed 3M?s RFID file tracking system. According to Judy Hefren, FSU?s Assistant Director of Sponsored-Research Accounting Services, these offices oversee more than 1,200 active research projects, which produce approximately $ 200 million in grants annually. In support of this effort, the university maintains more than 3,000 project files, to which more than 40 employees have routine access. Hefren recently commented: ?Looking for the file that?s critically needed by one person, but is in the possession of someone else, is not a productive way to spend valuable time. A missing file can delay an invoice or interrupt the progression of a project. And with so many people having simultaneous access to thousands of files, the potential for inefficiency is high. We were determined to address that problem.? Florida State thus stands as an early leader in state government use of such file management systems.

    Time to Put Systems in Place

    This is an exciting application area, both from the user perspective and the RFID vendor perspective. Government agencies across the board ? not just those dealing with legal issues ? will need to seriously examine how such RFID-based file tracking systems can be applied in their organizations. From healthcare to education to public assistance, government agencies are being held to higher standards for data security and higher expectations in terms of service delivery. RFID-based file tracking can deliver the goods in these areas, while also making good business sense from an ROI standpoint, especially when taking into account the lost man hours that it takes to find misplaced or simply misfiled folders. Thus, we can expect more and more vendors to target the government marketplace, adapting systems from other retail and library applications for file management tasks.

    The Car Accident Claims Kit


    2012 - 02.20

    The Car Accident Claims Kit
    A Top Rated Accident Lawyers Do-it-yourself Guide To Winning Car Insurance Claims.
    The Car Accident Claims Kit

    Insider Tennis Strategies And Tactics.
    Improve Your Tennis Game With Insider Strategies Of The Top Players.
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    Decline Of Males The


    2012 - 02.19

    Decline of Males: The First Look at an Unexpected New World for Men and Women


    “This provocative book raises questions about the awesome influences of nanotechnology and genetic engineering on the future of human sexuality and social structure. Highly recommended.”(Library Journal) “Lionel Tiger, a pioneer of biological anthropology and developer of the concept of male bonding, here delivers a very well-researched and well-written brief for masculinism, which if successful, may gain parity with feminism and eventually transform women’s studies within academia into what they should have always been, namely, gender studies.” (Edward O. Wilson, author of Consilience and Pellegrino University Research Professor, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University) “This book, written without the ideological blinkers that obscure most contemporary discussions of gender, is full of incredible nuance and insight that will reward careful reading.” (Francis Fukuyama, author of Trust and The End of History and the Last Man, and Hirst Professor of Public Policy, George Mason University) “In an utterly persuasive book that must change the discourse on sexual politics, Lionel Tiger offers his startling perspective on humanity’s future. By giving women unprecedented control of human reproduction, the new technologies of conception and contraception have already put men well on the way to becoming tomorrow’s ‘second sex’-with no reversal in sight.” (Christina Hoff Sommers, author of Who Stole Feminism? and W.H. Brady Fellow, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research) “The Decline of Males is an extremely well and clearly written and powerfully argued account of the changing relations between men and women. The distinguished anthropologist, claims that the male faces obsolescence… I hope that the book is unduly alarmist, but I fear that it may not be.” (Richard A. Posner, author of Sex and Reason and chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit) “The Decline of Males will perhaps be tarred with the

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    The Car Accident Claims Kit


    2012 - 02.19

    The Car Accident Claims Kit
    A Top Rated Accident Lawyers Do-it-yourself Guide To Winning Car Insurance Claims.
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    The Car Accident Claims Kit


    2012 - 02.16

    The Car Accident Claims Kit
    A Top Rated Accident Lawyers Do-it-yourself Guide To Winning Car Insurance Claims.
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    The Men They Couldn’t Hang


    2012 - 02.16

    The Men They Couldn’t Hang presents STEFAN CUSH & THE FERAL FAMILY
    Event on 2012-02-25 19:30:00
    The Men They Couldnt Hang presents STEFAN CUSH & THE FERAL FAMILY (playing Stefan Cushs new album and TMTCH classics)

    This is a brand new musical and creative collaboration featuring, amongst others, Sputnik Weazel, Tom Spencer, Ricky McGuire, and Stefan Cush.

    The Feral Family project marks the beginning of a new chapter in the great rock 'n' roll escaladopade!

    About us… a brief potted history

    Stefan Cush – Singer, song-writer, guitarist with over twenty-five years time served with super-charged rebel folk-rock combo, The Men They Couldn`t Hang (T.M.T.C.H.) Other musical ventures include playing guitar for The Pogues (standing in for a poorly Philip Chevron). In addition to live music, Mr. Cush has played venerable host as D.J. in London club land, holding court with Trish O`Flynn at the renowned Mean Fiddler venue for several years.

    Sputnik Weazel – Drums, Keyboards, and Feral production. Originally from Manchester, then reared down south… Sputnik's career spans more decades and countries than he can remember, he has busked with Eddie Izzard, jammed with Jools Holland, and also drums with T.M.T.C.H. and the Surfin' Lungs (Wild Punk Records: Spain).

    Tom Spencer – Lead guitar. The talented Mr. Spencer has enjoyed an illustrious career in the post-punk rock 'n' roll circus. He spent the 90's touring the European circuit incessantly with Big Boy Tomato, Sugarsnatch and punk legends The Lurkers. In '98 he formed The Yo-yos, signed to Sub-Pop and spent time in the good old U S of A. In recent years he's been a member of Ginger Wildheart and Friends, The Loyalties, The Dogs D'Amour and The Vincent Razorbacks to name merely a few. Tom is also on banjo duties with the ubiquitous T.M.T.C.H.

    Ricky McGuire – Bass Guitar. Hailing from Kilburnie, Ayrshire, Ricky has graced stages the world over with his deft fretwork! Ricky's played bass in Chaotic Youth, J.C.B., The Fits, U.K. Subs – earning first class punk honors! Since the late eighties he's been in T.M.T.C.H.

    http://www.stefancush.com/index.html

    at Stereo York
    54 Gillygate York
    York, United Kingdom

    ENSEMBLE COURT-CIRCUIT
    Event on 2012-02-20 00:00:00

    • ENSEMBLE COURT-CIRCUIT
    • Disponible en :
    • JEAN DEROYER
    • le lundi 20/02/2012 à 20h30 2012-02-20T20:30+0100

    at THEATRE DES BOUFFES DU NORD
    37 bis bd de la Chapelle
    Paris, France

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