Saturday, February 4, 2012

Severe Driving In Fairburn ? Gowen's Automotive Repairs

Most Fairburn motorists know that their owner?s manuals have schedules for preventive maintenance. Things like oil changes, transmission service and so on. They say you should change your oil every so many miles or after so many months. Fairburn people understand this very well. Severe Driving In FairburnWhat they may not know is that there are actually two service schedules: the regular schedule and the severe service schedule. The mileage and time intervals are lower on the severe service schedule.

Now when you hear ?severe service?, you may think it doesn?t apply to you because you don?t feel your driving conditions are severe or extreme ? it?s just normal everyday driving around Fairburn. At Gowen?s Automotive Repairs, we discuss the conditions that manufacturers classify as severe so that you can make the judgment on your own driving.

  • Most trips are less than four miles
  • Most trips are less than ten miles and outside temperatures are below freezing in Fairburn
  • You drive in very hot GA weather
  • Driving at low speed most of the time (under 55 mph)
  • Stop and go driving
  • Operating your vehicle in dusty, polluted or muddy conditions
  • You tow a trailer, regularly carry heavy loads or carry a car-top carrier on your SUV

Most Fairburn drivers operate under severe driving conditions at least some of the time. How do you know which schedule to follow for your SUV?

Carefully think about your driving conditions and decide if you should do your preventive maintenance closer to the severe service recommendation or the regular recommendation. Of course, your Gowen?s Automotive Repairs advisor can help you with your decision.

At Gowen?s Automotive Repairs in Fairburn GA (30213) we install quality NAPA replacement parts. Give us a call at 770.964.2455. To learn more about NAPA AutoCare, visit www.NAPAAutoCare.com.

Source: http://gowensautomotiverepairs.mynapatools.com/2012/02/02/severe-driving-in-fairburn/

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South Carolina women beat No. 8 Tennessee 64-60 (AP)

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. ? Dawn Staley was determined to end South Carolina's long losing streak to Tennessee.

It had been 32 years since the Gamecocks last beat the Lady Vols, a drought that included 40 straight defeats. But the coach had a feeling the skid was about to end and her team obliged, beating eighth-ranked Tennessee 64-60 on Thursday night.

Markeshia Grant scored a career-high 27 points and South Carolina got strong performances from the rest of its guards to finally get past the Lady Vols.

It had been the second-longest active winning streak by one opponent over another. Stanford has beaten Washington State 52 straight times.

"I think anytime when you have an opportunity to play Tennessee year in and year out, you keep measuring yourself, you keep trying to find game plans that will put you in the best possible situation to win," Staley said. "I thought coming into this particular game with how we were playing, it was our best shot, and we did it."

The Gamecocks (18-5, 7-3 Southeastern Conference) were down 60-55 when Ashley Bruner hit a layup with 3:18 to play. The basket launched a 9-0 South Carolina run to close the game, and Ieasia Walker hit the go-ahead layup with 2:15 to play.

The Lady Vols led 57-50 with 5:02 to play in the back-and-forth game, but a layup by Walker and a 3-pointer by Grant, one of seven by the senior, fired up the Gamecocks bench. Tennessee remained flat the rest of the way and missed five shots during South Carolina's game-ending run.

"I'm just glad our players got a chance to experience this experience, knowing the tradition of Tennessee," said Staley, who had never beaten Tennessee as a coach at either Temple or South Carolina. "By far, this is the biggest win of my career."

In the final 3 minutes, the Gamecocks forced a turnover by point guard Ariel Massengale and tied up the ball twice. South Carolina gained possession on the second jump ball, preventing Tennessee from getting a chance at a game-tying shot with 47 seconds left.

Tennessee outshot South Carolina 41.4 percent to 39.4 percent and held a 44-36 advantage in rebounding but had little answer for the Gamecocks' guards. La'Keisha Sutton added 12 points, and Walker had 11.

"We didn't have an answer for them the last 4 minutes of the game. We didn't have an answer for their runs," Tennessee associate head coach Holly Warlick said. "We continue to let star players put up big numbers against us, and that's been a focal point for us, but obviously it hasn't been good enough."

Glory Johnson scored 13 points in 26 minutes for Tennessee (16-6, 7-2), but foul trouble kept her from being the force in the paint the Lady Vols have come to rely on. Massengale scored 12 points and Shekinna Stricklen grabbed 10 rebounds.

The Lady Vols hadn't dropped an SEC game at home since a loss to LSU on Feb. 14, 2008, but they have struggled in the first season since coach Pat Summitt announced she'd been diagnosed with early onset dementia, Alzheimer's type.

"We have the fan support. We have home-court advantage. We're sleeping in our own beds before the game. We're having a great pregame meal. We're completely prepared with the scouting report from our coaches, so this loss is on us. There are no excuses," Johnson said.

South Carolina has been laying the foundation for one of its strongest seasons ever. It now owns the program's best record since the 2001-02 season, when the Gamecocks finished 20-3 and reached the NCAA regional finals.

The Gamecocks have managed the feat with the same kind of sharp focus on defense that has been the hallmark of so many Summitt-coached teams. They entered the game ranked second in the nation in limiting opponents to 47.5 points per game and tops in the nation with 20.1 3-point shooting defense.

That defense frustrated the Lady Vols all over the floor. They struggled to get second-chance points, hit just one 3-pointer and turned the ball over 11 times.

The Gamecocks' last win over a top-10 team came in a 71-52 decision over then-No. 6 Vanderbilt on Jan. 3, 2002, in Columbia. The highest-ranked team the Gamecocks had defeated in Staley's four seasons was then-No. 14 Georgia on Feb. 25, 2010, when South Carolina left Athens with a 52-42 victory.

"I really can't put it into words because I don't think it has hit me yet," Sutton said. "I'm really happy for our team, Coach Staley, our coaching staff for preparing us and just every player who ever put on a Gamecock uniform."

During the team shootaround on Thursday, Staley, South Carolina assistant coach and former Lady Vol Nikki McCray and the rest of the Gamecocks presented to Summitt's son Tyler a $20,000 check to the Alzheimer's Association in honor of the Hall of Fame coach.

Soon after that, Staley's own college coach, former Virginia coach Debbie Ryan, spoke to the Gamecocks about believing in themselves. With Staley as her point guard, Ryan's Cavaliers beat Summitt's Lady Vols in the 1990 NCAA regional finals.

"We had my college coach Debbie Ryan come talk to our team about everyone believing on one accord, and being on one accord, and anything is possible," Staley said. "I think our team took that to heart."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120203/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkw_t25_scarolina_tennessee_folo

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Friday, February 3, 2012

The Challenge: Battle of the Exes ? Elimination Week 2

Tonight?s episode of MTV?s show ?The Challenge: Battle of the Exes? had an shocking twist as two teams where sent packing. After winning the challenge and being named ?power couple,? Vinny and Sarah chose Wes and Mandi to go into the Dome against Leroy and Naomi. However, when Vinny engaged in inappropriate conduct during a [...]

Source: http://www.celebritymound.com/the-challenge-battle-of-the-exes-elimination-week-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-challenge-battle-of-the-exes-elimination-week-2

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Wednesday Words of Wisdom ? Winter Reading Hopefuls ...

Reading has taken a back burner, since we moved into our new home a month ago.? We are still working hard on various projects for our home, but have slowed down tremendously.? I received a bookstore gift card for Christmas and finally purchased new books to read.

Here are the books I hope to delve into this winter.

The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls

This book was recommended by a friend.? It is a memoir of the author?s childhood growing up with an alcoholic father and mentally unstable mother.? The story focuses on extreme poverty, instability and neglect during the author?s childhood.? This book will not be for the faint of heart, but I enjoy reading stories of struggles and triumph.? As difficult as it may be to read, I know I will be moved and enlightened.

Your True Home by Thich Nhat Hanh

Author, Thich Nhat Hanh, is a Buddhist Vietnamese monk and peace activist.? I have read several of his books including, Peace is in Every Step.? His writing style is reader friendly for those who wish to understand more about Buddhism.? Your True Home is a 365 page, daily meditation book.? The book is designed to be read?daily and then meditate on the message.??I have already begun reading this book and enjoy it tremendously.

The Emperor of All Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee

The Emperor of All Maladies is written, by Dr Siddhartha Mukherjee, a medical oncologist.? This book is a non-fictional account of the history of cancer.? I came across this is the bookstore and selected it because it looked interesting.?? Cancer is a word becoming a more frequently used, each year I get older.? I hope to gain valuable insight into the disease and its history.

Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua

Several months ago, I?overheard a group of mothers talking about this book.?? All of the moms were appalled by the parenting style of author, Amy Chua. The book is the author?s personal account of raising two daughters, in what she calls the ?Chinese Style? of parenting.? I have begun this book and find it extremely interesting.? I will be featuring Battle Hymn for a future Words of Wisdom book selection.

Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can?t Stop Talking by Susan Cain

Three different magazines, all recommended this new book.? My extended family and immediate family are filled with introverts.? As a matter of fact, I consider myself an introvert too, but an outgoing one.? The book celebrates the values of an introvert, ?in a world favors extroverts.

A lot of wonderful books to read?this winter.? ?The bad news is a Southern California winter is filled with wonderful sunshine and warmth.? It will be hard for me to stay indoors and not work on my garden.

Enjoy reading.

Talk to you soon, friends.

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Source: http://insanityofmotherhood.com/2012/02/01/wednesday-words-of-wisdom-winter-reading-hopefuls/

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AP Enterprise: War experience aids hostage rescues

FILE - In this file photo taken from insurgents video released on Tuesday Jan. 25, 2005, a man who identifies himself as American Roy Hallums pleads for Arab rulers to intercede to spare his life. Hallums was kidnapped by gunmen in Iraq in 2004 and held for 311 days before U.S. Army Delta Force operators rescued him from a small, underground room. U.S. special forces units are compiling a string of successful hostage rescues, thanks to improved technology and a decade of wartime experience. But despite technological advances like thermal imaging and surveillance drones, the raids remain high-risk. (AP Photo/Insurgents video via APTN, File) TV OUT

FILE - In this file photo taken from insurgents video released on Tuesday Jan. 25, 2005, a man who identifies himself as American Roy Hallums pleads for Arab rulers to intercede to spare his life. Hallums was kidnapped by gunmen in Iraq in 2004 and held for 311 days before U.S. Army Delta Force operators rescued him from a small, underground room. U.S. special forces units are compiling a string of successful hostage rescues, thanks to improved technology and a decade of wartime experience. But despite technological advances like thermal imaging and surveillance drones, the raids remain high-risk. (AP Photo/Insurgents video via APTN, File) TV OUT

FILE - This undated file photo provided by the Hallums family shows Susan Hallums, right, and her ex-husband, Roy Hallums, who was kidnapped by gunmen in Iraq in 2004 and held for 311 days before U.S. Army Delta Force operators rescued him from a small, underground room. U.S. special forces units are compiling a string of successful hostage rescues, thanks to improved technology and a decade of wartime experience. But despite technological advances like thermal imaging and surveillance drones, the raids remain high-risk. (AP Photo/Hallums Family, File) NO SALES

FILE - In this undated file photo taken at an unknown location and released by the Danish Refugee Council on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012 shows American Jessica Buchanan, 32, from the Danish Refugee Council's de-mining unit who was taken hostage in Somalia and later freed by U.S. Navy SEALs. U.S. Navy SEALs last week parachuted into a dark-of-night Somalia, then moved on foot to where captors were holding an American woman and a Danish man. The SEALs killed nine captors, rescued the two hostages and jumped on helicopters back to the only U.S. military base in Africa, in the tiny Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti. (AP Photo/Danish Refugee Council, File)

FILE - In this undated file photo taken at an unknown location and released by the Danish Refugee Council on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012 shows Dane Poul Hagen Thisted, 60, from the Danish Refugee Council's de-mining unit who was taken hostage in Somalia and later freed by U.S. Navy SEALs. U.S. Navy SEALs last week parachuted into a dark-of-night Somalia, then moved on foot to where captors were holding an American woman and a Danish man. The SEALs killed nine captors, rescued the two hostages and jumped on helicopters back to the only U.S. military base in Africa, in the tiny Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti. (AP Photo/Danish Refugee Council, File)

(AP) ? Roy Hallums was enduring his 311th day of captivity, blindfolded, his hands and feet bound, stuffed into a hole under the floor of a farm building outside Baghdad. He heard a commotion upstairs and managed to get the blindfold off. Delta Force troops broke open the hatch. An American soldier jumped down.

"He looks at me and points and says, 'Are you Roy?' I say 'yes,' and he yells back up the stairs: 'Jackpot!'" Hallums recalled in a phone interview with The Associated Press six years after his rescue.

Another mission by elite U.S. troops took place just last week, this time in Somalia, resulting in an American and a Danish hostage being rescued and nine kidnappers killed.

U.S. special forces units are compiling a string of successful hostage rescues, thanks to improved technology and a decade of wartime experience. But despite technological advances like thermal imaging and surveillance drones, the raids remain high-risk. Success or failure can depend on a snap decision made by a rescuer with bullets flying all around, or determination by kidnappers to kill any captives before they can be freed.

In 2010, the U.S. Navy's SEAL Team 6 tried to rescue Linda Norgrove, a Scottish aid worker, from her Taliban captors in Afghanistan. She was killed by a grenade thrown in haste by one of the American commandoes.

The kidnappings of foreigners living or traveling overseas continues unabated, as it has for decades. While the probability of a person being kidnapping is low, abductions do occur regularly, especially in high-risk nations like Somalia, Pakistan, Mexico and Colombia.

Even those who are supremely aware of the risks can disappear. In December 2006, Felix Batista, an American anti-kidnapping expert and negotiator for hostage releases, was kidnapped in Saltillo, Mexico, and hasn't been heard from since.

Just last Tuesday, armed tribesmen in Yemen kidnapped six United Nations workers: an Iraqi, a Palestinian, a Colombian, a German and two Yemenis. On Jan. 20, kidnappers grabbed an American and held him for a week before releasing him, perhaps after a ransom was paid.

U.S. troops have been tasked with rescues mostly in areas where American forces were already stationed, like Afghanistan, Iraq and around Somalia, said Taryn Evans, an expert on kidnappings at AKE, a risk mitigation company outside London. As they've gotten more experienced, they've gotten better.

In 2009, SEAL sharpshooters killed three Somali pirates holding the American captain of the Maersk Alabama hostage in a lifeboat. And late last month, U.S. Navy SEALs parachuted into Somalia under cover of night, then moved on foot to where captors were holding an American woman and a Danish man who had been kidnapped together in October. The SEALs killed nine captors and rescued the two hostages while suffering no casualties themselves in the Jan. 25 operation.

Their skill in carrying out such missions has been honed by America's two wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, said Seth Jones, a civilian adviser to the commanding general of the U.S. special operations forces in Afghanistan from 2009-2011.

"They have conducted so many operations in these areas, from hostage rescues to strike operations to capture-kill missions. What it does is significantly improves the competence of special operations," Jones told The Associated Press. He said commando missions are "now routine."

Though Navy SEAL Team 6 rescued the American and the Dane, one American kidnapped in January in Somalia remains behind. His captors told AP they moved him several times in the hours immediately after the SEAL raid, out of fear the U.S. military could try another rescue attempt.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State William Burns said this week the U.S. is "very concerned" about the remaining hostage and that Washington is following the case closely and taking it very seriously.

"It's an essential obligation for any government to do everything we can to protect our citizens and that's exactly what President Obama did when he ordered the successful hostage rescue" in Somalia, Burns said.

Rescues entail risk, but Hallums, who was kidnapped by a gang in November 2004, is thankful the U.S. military carries them out.

Without a rescue attempt, the former contractor from Memphis, Tennessee, said: "I was going to be dead for sure."

Hallums' captors were demanding $12 million for his release. His Saudi Arabia-based employer ? which provided support services for U.S. troops ? offered $1 million.

Hallums noted that a successful rescue requires the work of many more people than the commandoes who carry out the raid. The FBI, CIA and National Security Agency all work to gather information, data that is then turned over to military intelligence, where an operations officer devises a rescue plan.

"You hear about SEAL Team 6 but behind them there's hundreds of people working to get information that they can take out and execute the rescue," Hallums said.

Conducting a rescue involves life-and-death calculations. The teams must assess the risk of the raid, both to the military personnel and the hostages themselves. Is it certain that the hostage is at the location? How many people are on guard? Are they alert 24 hours a day? Are the guards armed and are they likely to shoot at the invading force?

One other important part of the equation: Would the guards shoot and kill the hostage if they knew a rescue was under way? A rescue team arriving in noisy helicopters can doom the hostages they want to rescue. That's what happened when Colombian army troops, who have a lot of experience in hostage situations, went in to rescue 13 hostages ? including a state governor and a former defense minister ? in 2003 in the jungles of northern Colombia.

The rebels holding the hostages heard the helicopters approaching and began executing the hostages. Just three survived. The rescuers arrived to find bodies scattered all over.

In 2009, an Afghan translator kidnapped alongside a New York Times reporter was killed in a hail of bullets during a rescue attempt by British commandoes. Such deaths underscore the dangers of hostage rescues.

"You don't want dead SEALs. That has a whole range of military and political ramifications," said Jones, who has a book called "Hunting in the Shadows: The Pursuit of al Qa'ida since 9/11" coming out in May. "You also don't want dead hostages. Sometimes you get this stuff wrong, since you're always dealing in probability."

Jones said he lacks data to know if the number of hostage rescues is rising, but that special operations activities are increasing overall. The military at large is undergoing financial cutbacks, he noted, but the budget for special operations forces is intact.

Technology has improved the chances of success. Aerial drones can monitor guard activity and provide a layout of the location. Watching a pattern of life allows the military to make educated guesses about the chances for success.

But even with that advantage, Evans said no mission is guaranteed success. The Somali captors could have shot and killed the American and Danish hostages during last week's raid if they had seen the SEALs coming, she said. That's why most people try to reach a negotiated rescue ? a ransom payment ? instead.

But Hallums said even though hostage rescues are risky, sometimes they have to be done.

"There's risk, but look at the risk I was in. I was going to be dead for sure ? 100 percent," Hallums said. "So it's better odds with them coming in to try and help you out. Because otherwise you have no chance."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-02-02-AF-US-Military-Hostage-Rescues/id-04963f378b824e1299921ff18853ba80

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Alabama immigration crackdown costs state up to $11 bln: study (Reuters)

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (Reuters) ? Alabama's crackdown on illegal immigrants, widely seen as the toughest in the United States, has cost the state's economy up to $10.8 billion, according to a new study.

The Alabama law, passed in June, requires police to detain people they suspect of being in the U.S. illegally if they cannot produce proper documentation when stopped for any reason, among other measures.

The cost-benefit analysis by University of Alabama economist Samuel Addy estimated up to 80,000 jobs were vacated by illegal immigrants fleeing the crackdown, costing Alabama's economy up to $10.8 billion.

The lost jobs also cost Alabama up to $264.5 million in lost state sales and income taxes, and as much as $93.1 million in lost city and county sales taxes, it found.

A U.S. appeals court has blocked Alabama from enforcing parts of the law, including a provision that permits Alabama to require public schools to determine the legal residency of children upon enrollment. But the court left most of the law untouched.

State Republicans who support the law say it will help create jobs for legal residents by driving out undocumented workers and their families, and save up to $280 million they said is spent by the state each year on health and education services for the undocumented.

The findings of the new University of Alabama study served up ammunition to critics of the law in the state, which is trying to trim spending to balance its budget.

"It is hypocritical for 'no tax and spend' Republicans to pass something like this that sucks money right out of the general fund when we are cutting funding by 25 percent," said state Representative Patricia Todd, a Birmingham Democrat.

Todd claims that $9 million has already been spent on litigation to defend the new law, a figure she said she received from the legislative fiscal office.

The study added in the costs of healthcare and social services to undocumented people that would be saved. However, it found these savings to be negligible when compared to the increased costs of law enforcement and businesses that now have to run checks on citizenship.

Alabama Legislature convenes February 7 and even staunch defenders of the bill admit it needs revision. However, the repeal sought by opponents seems unlikely, according to Representative Paul DeMarco, a Republican.

"I do not see and would not support a complete repeal of the law, but will look at recommendations being made by the Attorney General and others," said DeMarco.

There are an estimated 11.2 million illegal immigrants in the United States.

Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah have passed "omnibus" immigration crackdowns since Arizona blazed the trail in 2010 with a law requiring police to check the status of all those they arrested and suspected of being in the country illegally. That measure has since been blocked by a court.

Controversy over the crackdown flared late last year, after two employees with foreign automakers Mercedes-Benz and Honda were stopped by police implementing the law.

(Editing by Tim Gaynor and Paul Thomasch)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120201/us_nm/us_alabama_immigration_economy

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GOP race's approaching lull will test Gingrich (The Arizona Republic)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/193480894?client_source=feed&format=rss

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