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By sprez

Views: 4196

Dan Hawley, riding his New Bike - 360 Monster Creation

By lzamora30

Views: 4178

EOC 2610

By Fluxtrol

Views: 4170

Welcome to Chapter II, Induction Installations.

By mreynold08

Views: 4164

With no major gaffes, stumbles or snafus made by Sen. Barack Obama or Sen. John McCain during the second presidential debate, neither candidate won hands down.There were no fireworks, no major water cooler moments. Even though the debaters traded testy jabs over the economy, the Drudge Report went so far as to label the debate "boring." At first glance, it might seem this duel was a draw.Nevertheless, there is a growing consensus among the pundits that McCain lost the debate, not because of what he did but because of what he didn't do: He didn't create the game-changing moment his campaign needed to alter the trajectory of the race.With McCain lagging in the polls, Politico's Alexander Burns sums up why Obama gets the "W" next to his name:Obama didn't deliver a knockout punch tonight. But he denied his opponent the chance to rescramble the campaign, and that was enough. The day goes to him.The Associated Press, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post all concur, in their own way. This snoozefest created a winner because no one won at all.There were a few in the media who focused more on the apparent tie. Mark Halperin at Time gave McCain a B and Obama a B+. Of McCain, he wrote:The Republican nominee was by turns aggressive, sensitive, conservative and conversational. Successfully presented a negative case against Obama with an upbeat, optimistic smile.Ultimately though, Halperin echoed the general consensus:[Obama] played it typically cautious and safe, and thus avoided major blunders, knowing if he commits no errors for the next 30 days, he will be the next president of the United States.Even if you don't put much stock in the talking heads, consider what non-media types said. Each candidate stood his ground, looking comfortable in the town-hall setting, yet the insta-polls showed the same opinion: Obama won. In the CBS poll, 40 percent of uncommitted voters said Obama won. Twenty-six percent said John McCain won, while 34 percent said it was a tie.Over at CNN, Obama fared even better in the poll: 54 percent said he did a better job, 30 percent gave it to McCain.Despite those numbers, this isn't all bad news for McCain. The CBS poll did have a silver lining -- respondents still see McCain as more prepared for the job (83 percent to 58 percent).The other good news for the Arizona senator: there is about a month left in the campaign. That's enough time for him to find the game-changer he is looking for. (from yahoo.com)

By BuzTweet

Views: 4153

BuzTweet is web service that creates and broadcasts Social Media Campaigns to Twitter, Google Buzz, Facebook and LinkedIn. Campaigns are used for marketing, brand awareness, creating exposure and consistent communication of news and information. Your BuzTweet campaigns allow you to quickly create and simultaneously broadcast updates, posts or tweets (BuzTweets) to your social media accounts, while providing comparable results to pay per click, at a fraction of the cost and without the risk of click fraud.

By sprez

Views: 4144

this is only a Facebook test

By galetrainerstacey

Views: 4139

View this short demonstration of how Gale's new interface for Gale Virtual Reference Library can help get the most out of your ASCD Education Collection.

By pcheruku

Views: 4127

This tutorial shows you how to activate high contrast on windows

By coralblair

Views: 4125

By TFORT

Views: 4124