Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Making Money Secrets


Spending by outside groups may help determine the re-election chances of incumbent Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski who�s battling for her political life in the nation�s Last Frontier. 

With Murkowski, the perceived front-runner in Alaska�s U.S. Senate race, not even on the ballot, it�s close to chaos for pollsters. But that hasn�t stopped outside groups from making significant investments in a state with cheap media markets.

All told, outside groups trying to influence the state�s general election have spent $2.4 million and counting on independent expenditures, such as TV ads, mailers, phone banks or canvassers that explicitly advocate for or against a federal candidate that are not coordinated with any candidate�s campaign, according to a Center for Responsive Politics analysis.

That�s on top of $573,300 that was spent during August's GOP primary, in which Murkowski lost to attorney Joe Miller, a favorite of the Tea Party and her nemesis, former Republican Gov. Sarah Palin. Nevertheless, Murkowski continued on as a write-in candidate, trying to become the first politician in more than 50 years to win a Senate seat via a write-in candidacy. (Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was the last, in 1954.)

The National Republican Senatorial Committee, which endorsed Miller after Murkowski�s defeat, spent more than $311,900 touting Miller last week alone.

The national party committee has also spent another $91,000 and counting attacking Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Scott McAdams, the current mayor of Sitka.

In Murkowski�s corner, a new �super PAC� called Alaskans Standing Together has spent $1.26 million on independent expenditures aiding Murkowski.

As a �Super PAC,� officially known as an independent expenditure-only committee, Alaskans Standing Together can raise unlimited amounts of money from individuals and corporations for political advertisements and other expenses -- so long as it doesn�t contribute that cash directly to any politician. And Alaskans Standing Together�s contributions have come exclusively from corporations -- Alaska Native corporations, as the Sunlight Foundation recently reported.

Another new group, American Action Network, has also spent money on Murkowski�s behalf.

American Action Network is a 501(c)4 nonprofit group organized under U.S. tax code as a social welfare organization. It is headed by former Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), who narrowly lost a re-election bid to Democrat Al Franken in 2008.

American Action Network shares office space with American Crossroads and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, the conservative, big-spending outfits heavily promoted by Republican operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie.

Neither American Crossroads nor Crossroads GPS has yet spent money in the Alaskan Senate race, one of only a handful of high-profile Senate races where the groups have yet to invest, as OpenSecrets Blog previously reported.

American Action Network, meanwhile, has spent $20,000 in support of Murkowski.

During the course of the primary and general elections so far, groups spent $1.36 million supporting Murkowski in outside messages, the Center�s research indicates.

Political committees, meanwhile, have spent $1.56 million supporting Miller during his primary and general election bids, the Center�s research indicates.

In addition to the political action committee of the Tea Party Express, which helped deliver Miller�s unexpected victory, other conservative groups backing Miller with independent expenditures include the National Right to Life Committee, the Susan B. Anthony List, the Family Research Council, South Carolina Republican Sen. Jim DeMint's leadership PAC, the Club for Growth and the Club for Growth�s new �super PAC.�

The only spending targeting McAdams so far has been the $91,000 from the NRSC. No liberal groups have yet to report independent expenditures on his behalf.

Not even the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has reported independent expenditures in Alaska. Instead, the group has during the past two weeks pumped money into Senate contests in Illinois, Connecticut, Nevada, West Virginia, Washington, Colorado, Pennsylvania and Kentucky.



Your daily dose of news and tidbits from the world of money in politics:

DEMOCRATS MORE LIKELY TO PERSONALLY ATTACK OPPONENTS IN ADVERTISEMENTS: According to a recent report by the Wesleyan Media Project, in 2010, �pro-Democratic ads focused on the personal characteristics of Republican candidates in 21 percent of their attack ads� compared to 11 percent of pro-Republican ads. This is up from the 12 percent of Democratic attack ads in 2008 that were focused on personal characteristics. 

The report cautions against claims that this election is unusually negative stating the proportion of negative to positive ads is comparable to 2008. However, the big difference is that among negative ads there is an increase among personal attack ads. Overall, that rate has gone up from 14 percent in 2008 to 20 percent in 2010. The report also mentions that attack ads �are far more likely than other ads to be sponsored by parties and/or interest groups� rather than by candidates themselves.

When making independent expenditures with overt messages in favor or opposition to federal candidates, political groups must tell the Federal Election Commission whether their expenditure is to �support� a candidate or �oppose� a candidate. A Center for Responsive Politics analysis of outside groups� expenditures �opposing� candidates compared to ads �supporting� candidates since October 1st shows �opposing ads� totaling $218 million and supporting ads totaling $42 million. These expenditures include TV ads, radio ads, web ads, fliers, mailings, canvassers, phone banks and other communications:

REPUBLICAN RANKING MEMBERS ARE THE COOL KIDS ON THE BLOCK AGAIN:
Ranking members of House committees are becoming the popular kids. If
the Republicans take over majority in the House, committee ranking
members like Rep. David Camp (R-Mich.) will be the new chairmen. As the
New York Times reported Tuesday, Republicans in positions to become
chairmen of House committees are seeing an influx of cash and popularity
at fundraisers. Camp, the current ranking member of the tax-writing
House Ways and Means Committee is receiving more contributions as
lobbyists plan for the future.



Jennifer Bell, a former Senate Finance Committee aide and a current
health care lobbyist told the New York Times, �You don�t wait until Nov.
3 and say, �What is the plan?� Obviously, it is the majority that sets
the agenda.�



As OpenSecrets Blog reported yesterday, many industries have been
planning ahead and have started to shift contributions to Republicans.
This phenomenon is not unique to this election as contributions have
historically favored the majority party and have fluctuated accordingly.



Below is a Center for Responsive Politics analysis of contributions to
Camp that shows a sharp increase in contributions during the last three
months - through September 30th. The second chart shows the total contributions to all candidates
during the same period for a linear comparison:




U.S. FALLS OUT OF THE TOP 20 LEAST CORRUPT NATIONS LIST: Transparency International released their annual Corruption Perceptions Index on Tuesday revealing that the United States has dropped from the 19th least corrupt nation in 2009 to 22nd place this year. According to Reuters, Nancy Boswell, the President of TI in the United States stated that the United States has lost integrity and public faith about ethics in America due in part to the lending practices in the subprime crisis, �Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme and rows over political funding.�

On the bright side, the United States is perceived to be just less corrupt than Uruguay, France, Estonia and Slovenia.

Have a news tip or link to pass along? We want to hear from you! E-mail us at press@crp.org.

eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Spending by outside groups may help determine the re-election chances of incumbent Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski who�s battling for her political life in the nation�s Last Frontier. 

With Murkowski, the perceived front-runner in Alaska�s U.S. Senate race, not even on the ballot, it�s close to chaos for pollsters. But that hasn�t stopped outside groups from making significant investments in a state with cheap media markets.

All told, outside groups trying to influence the state�s general election have spent $2.4 million and counting on independent expenditures, such as TV ads, mailers, phone banks or canvassers that explicitly advocate for or against a federal candidate that are not coordinated with any candidate�s campaign, according to a Center for Responsive Politics analysis.

That�s on top of $573,300 that was spent during August's GOP primary, in which Murkowski lost to attorney Joe Miller, a favorite of the Tea Party and her nemesis, former Republican Gov. Sarah Palin. Nevertheless, Murkowski continued on as a write-in candidate, trying to become the first politician in more than 50 years to win a Senate seat via a write-in candidacy. (Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was the last, in 1954.)

The National Republican Senatorial Committee, which endorsed Miller after Murkowski�s defeat, spent more than $311,900 touting Miller last week alone.

The national party committee has also spent another $91,000 and counting attacking Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Scott McAdams, the current mayor of Sitka.

In Murkowski�s corner, a new �super PAC� called Alaskans Standing Together has spent $1.26 million on independent expenditures aiding Murkowski.

As a �Super PAC,� officially known as an independent expenditure-only committee, Alaskans Standing Together can raise unlimited amounts of money from individuals and corporations for political advertisements and other expenses -- so long as it doesn�t contribute that cash directly to any politician. And Alaskans Standing Together�s contributions have come exclusively from corporations -- Alaska Native corporations, as the Sunlight Foundation recently reported.

Another new group, American Action Network, has also spent money on Murkowski�s behalf.

American Action Network is a 501(c)4 nonprofit group organized under U.S. tax code as a social welfare organization. It is headed by former Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), who narrowly lost a re-election bid to Democrat Al Franken in 2008.

American Action Network shares office space with American Crossroads and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, the conservative, big-spending outfits heavily promoted by Republican operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie.

Neither American Crossroads nor Crossroads GPS has yet spent money in the Alaskan Senate race, one of only a handful of high-profile Senate races where the groups have yet to invest, as OpenSecrets Blog previously reported.

American Action Network, meanwhile, has spent $20,000 in support of Murkowski.

During the course of the primary and general elections so far, groups spent $1.36 million supporting Murkowski in outside messages, the Center�s research indicates.

Political committees, meanwhile, have spent $1.56 million supporting Miller during his primary and general election bids, the Center�s research indicates.

In addition to the political action committee of the Tea Party Express, which helped deliver Miller�s unexpected victory, other conservative groups backing Miller with independent expenditures include the National Right to Life Committee, the Susan B. Anthony List, the Family Research Council, South Carolina Republican Sen. Jim DeMint's leadership PAC, the Club for Growth and the Club for Growth�s new �super PAC.�

The only spending targeting McAdams so far has been the $91,000 from the NRSC. No liberal groups have yet to report independent expenditures on his behalf.

Not even the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has reported independent expenditures in Alaska. Instead, the group has during the past two weeks pumped money into Senate contests in Illinois, Connecticut, Nevada, West Virginia, Washington, Colorado, Pennsylvania and Kentucky.



Your daily dose of news and tidbits from the world of money in politics:

DEMOCRATS MORE LIKELY TO PERSONALLY ATTACK OPPONENTS IN ADVERTISEMENTS: According to a recent report by the Wesleyan Media Project, in 2010, �pro-Democratic ads focused on the personal characteristics of Republican candidates in 21 percent of their attack ads� compared to 11 percent of pro-Republican ads. This is up from the 12 percent of Democratic attack ads in 2008 that were focused on personal characteristics. 

The report cautions against claims that this election is unusually negative stating the proportion of negative to positive ads is comparable to 2008. However, the big difference is that among negative ads there is an increase among personal attack ads. Overall, that rate has gone up from 14 percent in 2008 to 20 percent in 2010. The report also mentions that attack ads �are far more likely than other ads to be sponsored by parties and/or interest groups� rather than by candidates themselves.

When making independent expenditures with overt messages in favor or opposition to federal candidates, political groups must tell the Federal Election Commission whether their expenditure is to �support� a candidate or �oppose� a candidate. A Center for Responsive Politics analysis of outside groups� expenditures �opposing� candidates compared to ads �supporting� candidates since October 1st shows �opposing ads� totaling $218 million and supporting ads totaling $42 million. These expenditures include TV ads, radio ads, web ads, fliers, mailings, canvassers, phone banks and other communications:

REPUBLICAN RANKING MEMBERS ARE THE COOL KIDS ON THE BLOCK AGAIN:
Ranking members of House committees are becoming the popular kids. If
the Republicans take over majority in the House, committee ranking
members like Rep. David Camp (R-Mich.) will be the new chairmen. As the
New York Times reported Tuesday, Republicans in positions to become
chairmen of House committees are seeing an influx of cash and popularity
at fundraisers. Camp, the current ranking member of the tax-writing
House Ways and Means Committee is receiving more contributions as
lobbyists plan for the future.



Jennifer Bell, a former Senate Finance Committee aide and a current
health care lobbyist told the New York Times, �You don�t wait until Nov.
3 and say, �What is the plan?� Obviously, it is the majority that sets
the agenda.�



As OpenSecrets Blog reported yesterday, many industries have been
planning ahead and have started to shift contributions to Republicans.
This phenomenon is not unique to this election as contributions have
historically favored the majority party and have fluctuated accordingly.



Below is a Center for Responsive Politics analysis of contributions to
Camp that shows a sharp increase in contributions during the last three
months - through September 30th. The second chart shows the total contributions to all candidates
during the same period for a linear comparison:




U.S. FALLS OUT OF THE TOP 20 LEAST CORRUPT NATIONS LIST: Transparency International released their annual Corruption Perceptions Index on Tuesday revealing that the United States has dropped from the 19th least corrupt nation in 2009 to 22nd place this year. According to Reuters, Nancy Boswell, the President of TI in the United States stated that the United States has lost integrity and public faith about ethics in America due in part to the lending practices in the subprime crisis, �Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme and rows over political funding.�

On the bright side, the United States is perceived to be just less corrupt than Uruguay, France, Estonia and Slovenia.

Have a news tip or link to pass along? We want to hear from you! E-mail us at press@crp.org.

eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

eric seiger

Teaching English Online by Teaching English Online


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Spending by outside groups may help determine the re-election chances of incumbent Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski who�s battling for her political life in the nation�s Last Frontier. 

With Murkowski, the perceived front-runner in Alaska�s U.S. Senate race, not even on the ballot, it�s close to chaos for pollsters. But that hasn�t stopped outside groups from making significant investments in a state with cheap media markets.

All told, outside groups trying to influence the state�s general election have spent $2.4 million and counting on independent expenditures, such as TV ads, mailers, phone banks or canvassers that explicitly advocate for or against a federal candidate that are not coordinated with any candidate�s campaign, according to a Center for Responsive Politics analysis.

That�s on top of $573,300 that was spent during August's GOP primary, in which Murkowski lost to attorney Joe Miller, a favorite of the Tea Party and her nemesis, former Republican Gov. Sarah Palin. Nevertheless, Murkowski continued on as a write-in candidate, trying to become the first politician in more than 50 years to win a Senate seat via a write-in candidacy. (Strom Thurmond of South Carolina was the last, in 1954.)

The National Republican Senatorial Committee, which endorsed Miller after Murkowski�s defeat, spent more than $311,900 touting Miller last week alone.

The national party committee has also spent another $91,000 and counting attacking Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Scott McAdams, the current mayor of Sitka.

In Murkowski�s corner, a new �super PAC� called Alaskans Standing Together has spent $1.26 million on independent expenditures aiding Murkowski.

As a �Super PAC,� officially known as an independent expenditure-only committee, Alaskans Standing Together can raise unlimited amounts of money from individuals and corporations for political advertisements and other expenses -- so long as it doesn�t contribute that cash directly to any politician. And Alaskans Standing Together�s contributions have come exclusively from corporations -- Alaska Native corporations, as the Sunlight Foundation recently reported.

Another new group, American Action Network, has also spent money on Murkowski�s behalf.

American Action Network is a 501(c)4 nonprofit group organized under U.S. tax code as a social welfare organization. It is headed by former Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minn.), who narrowly lost a re-election bid to Democrat Al Franken in 2008.

American Action Network shares office space with American Crossroads and Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, the conservative, big-spending outfits heavily promoted by Republican operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie.

Neither American Crossroads nor Crossroads GPS has yet spent money in the Alaskan Senate race, one of only a handful of high-profile Senate races where the groups have yet to invest, as OpenSecrets Blog previously reported.

American Action Network, meanwhile, has spent $20,000 in support of Murkowski.

During the course of the primary and general elections so far, groups spent $1.36 million supporting Murkowski in outside messages, the Center�s research indicates.

Political committees, meanwhile, have spent $1.56 million supporting Miller during his primary and general election bids, the Center�s research indicates.

In addition to the political action committee of the Tea Party Express, which helped deliver Miller�s unexpected victory, other conservative groups backing Miller with independent expenditures include the National Right to Life Committee, the Susan B. Anthony List, the Family Research Council, South Carolina Republican Sen. Jim DeMint's leadership PAC, the Club for Growth and the Club for Growth�s new �super PAC.�

The only spending targeting McAdams so far has been the $91,000 from the NRSC. No liberal groups have yet to report independent expenditures on his behalf.

Not even the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has reported independent expenditures in Alaska. Instead, the group has during the past two weeks pumped money into Senate contests in Illinois, Connecticut, Nevada, West Virginia, Washington, Colorado, Pennsylvania and Kentucky.



Your daily dose of news and tidbits from the world of money in politics:

DEMOCRATS MORE LIKELY TO PERSONALLY ATTACK OPPONENTS IN ADVERTISEMENTS: According to a recent report by the Wesleyan Media Project, in 2010, �pro-Democratic ads focused on the personal characteristics of Republican candidates in 21 percent of their attack ads� compared to 11 percent of pro-Republican ads. This is up from the 12 percent of Democratic attack ads in 2008 that were focused on personal characteristics. 

The report cautions against claims that this election is unusually negative stating the proportion of negative to positive ads is comparable to 2008. However, the big difference is that among negative ads there is an increase among personal attack ads. Overall, that rate has gone up from 14 percent in 2008 to 20 percent in 2010. The report also mentions that attack ads �are far more likely than other ads to be sponsored by parties and/or interest groups� rather than by candidates themselves.

When making independent expenditures with overt messages in favor or opposition to federal candidates, political groups must tell the Federal Election Commission whether their expenditure is to �support� a candidate or �oppose� a candidate. A Center for Responsive Politics analysis of outside groups� expenditures �opposing� candidates compared to ads �supporting� candidates since October 1st shows �opposing ads� totaling $218 million and supporting ads totaling $42 million. These expenditures include TV ads, radio ads, web ads, fliers, mailings, canvassers, phone banks and other communications:

REPUBLICAN RANKING MEMBERS ARE THE COOL KIDS ON THE BLOCK AGAIN:
Ranking members of House committees are becoming the popular kids. If
the Republicans take over majority in the House, committee ranking
members like Rep. David Camp (R-Mich.) will be the new chairmen. As the
New York Times reported Tuesday, Republicans in positions to become
chairmen of House committees are seeing an influx of cash and popularity
at fundraisers. Camp, the current ranking member of the tax-writing
House Ways and Means Committee is receiving more contributions as
lobbyists plan for the future.



Jennifer Bell, a former Senate Finance Committee aide and a current
health care lobbyist told the New York Times, �You don�t wait until Nov.
3 and say, �What is the plan?� Obviously, it is the majority that sets
the agenda.�



As OpenSecrets Blog reported yesterday, many industries have been
planning ahead and have started to shift contributions to Republicans.
This phenomenon is not unique to this election as contributions have
historically favored the majority party and have fluctuated accordingly.



Below is a Center for Responsive Politics analysis of contributions to
Camp that shows a sharp increase in contributions during the last three
months - through September 30th. The second chart shows the total contributions to all candidates
during the same period for a linear comparison:




U.S. FALLS OUT OF THE TOP 20 LEAST CORRUPT NATIONS LIST: Transparency International released their annual Corruption Perceptions Index on Tuesday revealing that the United States has dropped from the 19th least corrupt nation in 2009 to 22nd place this year. According to Reuters, Nancy Boswell, the President of TI in the United States stated that the United States has lost integrity and public faith about ethics in America due in part to the lending practices in the subprime crisis, �Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme and rows over political funding.�

On the bright side, the United States is perceived to be just less corrupt than Uruguay, France, Estonia and Slovenia.

Have a news tip or link to pass along? We want to hear from you! E-mail us at press@crp.org.

eric seiger

Teaching English Online by Teaching English Online


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Teaching English Online by Teaching English Online


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger eric seiger
eric seiger

Teaching English Online by Teaching English Online


eric seiger
eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.



eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Digital <b>...</b>

Olympus launches enhanced kit lens on Japan-only E-PL1s: Olympus has announced the Japan-only E-PL1s and, more significantly, the M.Zuiko Digital 14-42mm II 1:3.5-5.6 kit lens. The camera is a slightly tweaked version of the existing ...

David A. Love: Fox <b>News</b> Must Fire Glenn Beck for Mocking a <b>...</b>

All of us should be concerned about Glenn Beck's verbal assault on George Soros and his mocking of the Holocaust. Yet, this is more than a Jewish issue.

Small Business <b>News</b>: New Business Rules

The rules for business keep changing but a few things stay the same. First impressions matter, technology keeps changing the game and costs keep rising as.


eric seiger

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