Fuel Economy Center Stage at Los Angeles Auto Show 2012 ...

Debut 4 Prii

The Los Angeles Auto Show?s media preview days? included cars and SUVS with record fuel economy. All of the mainstream vehicle introductions ? whether the vehicle was fueled by gasoline, diesel, a gasoline-electric hybrid system (that may or may not plug in) or electricity ? focused on the improved fuel economy of the vehicle being introduced.

There?s a reason ? or two. First, as the automakers are demonstrating, vehicle fuel economy is increasing across the board. Second, customers are buying more fuel-efficient vehicles. Even with declining gas prices, the latest numbers from the University of Michigan UMTRI study show that. ?January through November of 2012 the sales-weighted fuel economy average of purchased vehicles has gone from 23.5 to 24.1 mpg. That?s only a 2.5% increase, but it follows on four years of measured increases. (The first month measured in Oct. 2007 showed a 20.1-mpg average.)

As if to underscore the point, the Environmental Protection Agency released the fuel economy ratings for 2013 cars and in the ?best? category the worst combined fuel economy is 42 mpg for the Prius v mid-sized station wagon.

So back to LA. We saw the introduction of a couple models that may hit the top 20 best sellers for the year, including a plug-in version of the Honda Accord, a redesigned Honda Civic and the Ford Fusion being named Green Car of the Year. But the meat of the show hit models that, while not the best sellers in a lineup, were critical to the ongoing success of a brand. Those included the Toyota RAV4, Subaru Forester, Acura RLX, Ford Fiesta and Transit Connect Wagon, Kia Forte, Hyundai Santa Fe, Porsche Cayman, VW Beetle Convertible, Chevy Spark EV, three Fiat 500 variations and an AMG variant of the Mercedes-Benz GL, along with more exotic concept cars from several manufacturers. At least three companies ? Audi, BMW and Mazda ? talked more about diesel engines than new models, while Ford and Mitsubishi, among others, highlighted new technology available in their cars as much as new hardware.

If fuel economy was the frequent refrain, ?class-leading? was the most popular adjective. That goal appears to be a moving target as each refreshed entry in a class seems to be poised to be the new ?leader,? usually by an inconsequential one or two miles per gallon. I say inconsequential because as has been shown in the recent dust-up with Honda and Hyundai-Kia over their fuel economy claims, ?your mileage may vary? has probably never carried more meaning than in current vehicles.

The plug-in vehicles that make up the EPA ?best? received some new contenders, all with promises of sky-high fuel economy numbers, but the reality of the slow market acceptance of these new technologies also sank in. That?s part of a market shift that?s been going on for the past two decades. No longer are there several models selling a half million units per year. The market has become more fragmented and the consumers demands more diverse. On their side, automakers have generally learned the smart way to spin new models off of common platforms/architectures and make them appear and function in truly different ways. So the new RAV4 or Santa Fe may not sell 250,000 units, but it extends the reach and leverages the investment in the platform it?s built upon, which is shared with several car models.

Biggest Buzz of the LA Show

BMW i31. BMW i3 coupe concept. While this is not a production vehicle and not the first time BMW has shown a version of the i3, it was one of most important cars at the show because of its groundbreaking technology. BMW?s extensive use of carbon fiber points the way toward extensive weight reduction with no loss of structural integrity and at a price point much-reduced from previous technologies. Carbon fiber is one of the critical technologies needed for EV success, but it also will play a role in keeping the internal combustion engine around as it lightens up vehicles so they can use smaller engines.

2. Honda Civic. This car, while in the top five sellers in the country, was given a quick redo due to negative reviews when it was introduced last year. Honda upgraded the car?s interior and rushed the changes into production in record time. Even though the car?s sales are strong, Honda responded quickly to concerns about the model and with the changes should help it to continue as a strong contender in the compact class. As fuel economy continues to be an automaker and consumer focus, this size of vehicle becomes a key component to a brand?s success. In the same way the Cruze has led Chevrolet?s renaissance, a well-received Civic is a must-have for Honda to maintain its market position.

Chevy Spark EV3. Fiat 500e and Chevrolet Spark EV. I?ll throw these two together because they represent an important shift in the image of small electric vehicles. They still have relatively short range and have little distinguishing features compared to their internal engine-powered cousins, but these two models were presented as something EVs have not been up to this point?serious performance and cars with an image beyond merely green.? The torque numbers these small cars throw up and the Fiat approach that ?this is an Italian car first and an electric car second? is significant. The sales numbers may not be destined to be too high, but at their lower price points these two could help rehabilitate the EV image for a whole new class of consumers.

Audi's Quartet of New Diesels4.? Audi and Mazda champion diesel. You could add BMW to the periphery of this new wave, along with Chevy and Mercedes. This is not simply dropping in diesel and noting how much more efficient it is than old port-injected gasoline engines. Both Audi and Mazda have state-of-the-art direct injection gasoline engines that offer some of the best fuel economy in their respective classes, but still feel there is a role for high-tech modern diesels. And, as Audi?s President Scot Keogh said at the show, this is the second generation of diesels with more expected to follow. The proliferation of diesels shows yet one more path that the auto industry is taking in its attempt to satisfy its customers desire for not just fuel economy, but functionality, hence the Audi diesel shows up in two SUVs as well as its full-size sedan.

5.? Ford Fusion as Green Car of the Year. For the first time, a model with one technology didn?t take home this trophy, which has been gaining prestige over the years. Previously, it?s been a battle between EVs, plug-ins, CNG, diesel, fuel cells and efficient gasoline cars. This year they gave the award to a Ford that would span several categories, coming in efficient gas, hybrid and plug-in hybrid models. It is a sign of things to come, where the consumer is going to be faced with much more complex choices in the showroom than at any time in the last century.

These five highlights of the LA Auto Show, the first major show of the season, may be sum of the direction of the automotive market. It ties things up nicely to say that new technology, rapid response to market changes, new images for alternative fuel/technology vehicles, ever-developing traditional technology and multi-faceted vehicles offering true consumer choice will be our future. And it is not happening way off in the future?these are all happening in the coming year. In that sense the LA Auto Show was a very timely window into what?s coming very soon.

By Michael Coates. is an internationally recognized expert in the field of automotive environmental issues. He has been an automotive editor and writer for more than three decades. In the past he has also worked with General Motors, Honda, Chrysler, Honda, Mercedes-Benz, the U.S. Council for Automotive Research BF Goodrich, and others in technology and telecommunications. His media experience includes Petersen Publishing (now part of Source Interlink), Green Car Journal, trade magazines, newspaper and television news reporting. He currently serves on the board of Western Automotive Journalists.

Source: http://www.cleanfleetreport.com/fuel-economy-la-auto-show-2012/

grammy award winners the band perry grammy awards whitney houston autopsy dobie gray bruce springsteen grammy nominations

Hospital: Nurse involved in Kate hoax call dies

(AP) ? King Edward VII hospital says a nurse involved in a prank telephone call to elicit information about the Duchess of Cambridge has died.

The hospital said Friday that Jacintha Saldanha had been a victim of the call made by two Australian radio disc jockeys. They did not immediately say what role she played in the call.

Saldanha was found dead early Friday. Police say her death is unexplained.

The Duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, had been in the hospital for acute morning sickness. The prank phone call took place early Tuesday and the two radio personalities apologized the following day.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-12-07-Britain-Royal%20Pregnancy-Hoax/id-a9ed19fe187c468ebbcbf5201bff1ad5

wimbledon ray allen Savages Home Run Derby 2012 San Diego fireworks steve nash july 4th

Real Estate Investors Offer Owner Financing then Sell the Note at a ...

Frustrated with fix and flip exit strategies, many real estate investors wonder if they will do better by offering terms (owner financing) and then immediately sell the note they?ve carried back in a simultaneous note sale. In this partial segment of Transaction Review & Calculator Practice hosted on Owner Financing Club, you can see that this investor would be better off discounting the property to attract a cash buyer, or someone who can qualify for a loan. ?I sound horrible ? too much holiday networking at Robert Hall & Associates AND the year-end FIBI mixer last night ;) , and I?m noisy with the mic, but hopefully this video will be somewhat instructive?

Leave a Reply

Source: http://notequeen.com/2012/12/07/real-estate-investors-offer-owner-financing-then-sell-the-note-at-a-discount-sometimes-its-better-to-discount-the-property/

Charlie Batch Robin Givens Miguel Calero BCS Bowls patriots bowl projections palestine

Andrew 'Weev' Auernheimer's Conviction Could Make You Less ...

In a New Jersey courtroom last month, federal prosecutors described Andrew Auernheimer as a publicity-hungry hacker who violated the privacy of thousands of iPad owners by disclosing their email addresses to a reporter.

A jury agreed, finding him guilty of identity theft and conspiracy to gain unauthorized access to computers. He faces up to 10 years in prison.

But security researchers worry that Auernheimer's conviction could jeopardize Internet security by creating a chilling effect on their work. These researchers, known as "white hat" hackers, find security flaws and report them to companies that are supposed to fix them before "black hat" hackers exploit them to harm consumers. Some say Auernheimer's conviction may make these good hackers more reluctant to disclose their findings, leaving consumers less safe online.

"If other researchers find flaws but are scared about disclosing them, that's going to give them pause," Jeremiah Grossman, founder of the security firm White Hat Security, said in an interview. "And that makes it easier for the bad guys to put people at risk."

Dave Aitel, founder of the security firm Immunity, said Auernheimer's conviction may have widespread implications for his industry.

"It's obvious to anyone with a technical background that the case the FBI brought against him is a travesty, and the fact that they won is even more insane," Aitel wrote. "If they manage to make it stick, the collateral damage is all of us."

Two years ago, Auernheimer, 27, known online by the nickname "Weev," found a security loophole in an AT&T server that allowed his self-described security group, Goatse Security, to collect 114,000 email addresses belonging to iPad 3G users. He turned over that information to a reporter at Gawker, which posted some partially redacted addresses, prompting an FBI investigation.

Security researchers typically turn over security flaws they discover to manufacturers and give them time to patch them before going public with their findings. But some believe that going public is the only way to force a company to improve their security.

Prosecutors said Auernheimer should have disclosed the flaw to AT&T, or to federal authorities.

"If he thought there was a real security vulnerability he could have done something else. He could have contacted the FBI," Zach Intrater, an assistant U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey, said in court last month. "But he didn't do that either. He only contacted reporters and you know why? Because his real motive was to publicize Goatse Security so he could market himself for financial gain."

Auernheimer said AT&T knew about the loophole and both the company and the FBI would have ignored him if he brought it to their attention. He said consumers should be informed when a company puts their security at risk.

He also said he does not adhere to the same code of ethics as "white hat" hackers. Last week, he wrote an op-ed in Wired arguing that researchers should disclose security weaknesses to someone "who will use it in the interests of social justice" and "facilitate the public shaming of a web application operator" -- and not directly to companies.

"My moral obligation is not to help AT&T, it's to criticize them," Auernheimer said in an interview with The Huffington Post.

AT&T declined to comment.

As he awaits his sentencing, scheduled for February, Auernheimer said he spends his days working and his nights partying. On a recent morning, he sat on a white leather couch in an apartment in lower Manhattan. Cigarette butts sat in an ashtray on a coffee table. Bottles of liquor lined one of the walls next a flat-screen TV. Auernheimer said it was an office for a company that he works for, but refused to disclose its name.

He wore a black hoodie, black combat boots, thick-framed glasses, cuffed jeans, and a thin red beard. He spoke with a deep gravelly voice and a slight Southern drawl, peppering his sentences with expletives and laughter.

He said he works in "material sciences" "disaster response" and "aluminum welding." He insisted he doesn't need the money because a community of hackers pays his rent, food and transit. He spends his free time reading Greek classics ("I'm a big fan of the pre-Socratics, personally.") and attending parties until 6 a.m.

He described himself as a philosopher, a prophet, and "a fed-up guy from Arkansas." A website created to raise money for his legal defense describes him as "the world's most notorious Internet troll" who "never takes anything seriously and generally treats life as a piece of performance art." As a troll, he frequently says things just to evoke an emotional response from people. He told The Huffington Post his last wish before going to prison was to play a game of paintball on jet skis.

His bail conditions preclude him from using a computer, but he still uses a smartphone and broadcasts his thoughts on a variety of topics, including cybersecurity, on Twitter, where he has nearly 3,000 followers.

He said he was not surprised that he was found guilty and expects to win his case on appeal. He also said he isn't afraid of prison, and plans to keep a blog during his incarceration.

He said his conviction has brought more attention to his message -- that corporations are evil and deserve criticism -- than any prank he could have pulled online.

"They?ve done my message a huge favor," he said. "What I'm trying to say has been greatly been helped by the fact that the federal government is shoving me in a prison cell."

Earlier on HuffPost:

"; var coords = [-5, -72]; // display fb-bubble FloatingPrompt.embed(this, html, undefined, 'top', {fp_intersects:1, timeout_remove:2000,ignore_arrow: true, width:236, add_xy:coords, class_name: 'clear-overlay'}); });

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/07/andrew-weev-auernheimer-conviction_n_2245218.html

herman cain south carolina palmetto rob lowe sanctum the notebook duke basketball miranda july

La Scala inaugurates season with 'Lohengrin'

In this undated photo provided by Alla Scala theater press office, Jonas Kaufmann, right, who plays Lohengrin, and Anja Harteros, playing Elsa, perform during rehersals of Richard Wagner's Lohengrin at the Milan La Scala opera house, Italy. The dual bicentennial of the births of composers Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner is turning into a dueling bicentennial. La Scala general manager Stephane Lissner on Monday, Dec. 3, 2012 dismissed as "ridiculous" criticism by the Italian media because the famed Milan opera house that was once Verdi's musical home is opening the celebratory season with Wagner's "Lohengrin." No less than Italy's respected President Giorgio Napolitano entered the fray. He wrote a letter to musical director Daniel Barenboim rejecting press rumors that he was snubbing the gala season opener on Friday. (AP Photo/Monika Rittershaus, La Scala)

In this undated photo provided by Alla Scala theater press office, Jonas Kaufmann, right, who plays Lohengrin, and Anja Harteros, playing Elsa, perform during rehersals of Richard Wagner's Lohengrin at the Milan La Scala opera house, Italy. The dual bicentennial of the births of composers Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner is turning into a dueling bicentennial. La Scala general manager Stephane Lissner on Monday, Dec. 3, 2012 dismissed as "ridiculous" criticism by the Italian media because the famed Milan opera house that was once Verdi's musical home is opening the celebratory season with Wagner's "Lohengrin." No less than Italy's respected President Giorgio Napolitano entered the fray. He wrote a letter to musical director Daniel Barenboim rejecting press rumors that he was snubbing the gala season opener on Friday. (AP Photo/Monika Rittershaus, La Scala)

In this undated photo provided by Alla Scala theater press office, Jonas Kaufmann, who plays Lohengrin, performs during rehersals of Richard Wagner's Lohengrin at the Milan La Scala opera house, Italy. The dual bicentennial of the births of composers Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner is turning into a dueling bicentennial. La Scala general manager Stephane Lissner on Monday, Dec. 3, 2012 dismissed as "ridiculous" criticism by the Italian media because the famed Milan opera house that was once Verdi's musical home is opening the celebratory season with Wagner's "Lohengrin." No less than Italy's respected President Giorgio Napolitano entered the fray. He wrote a letter to musical director Daniel Barenboim rejecting press rumors that he was snubbing the gala season opener on Friday. (AP Photo/Monika Rittershaus, La Scala)

(AP) ? The famed La Scala opera house is beginning its 2012-13 season honoring the dual bicentennials of its own Giuseppe Verdi and German icon Richard Wagner, starting with the Teutonic classic "Lohengrin."

Daniel Barenboim, La Scala's music director and a Wagner aficionado, conducts the gala season opener, one of the premier events on the European cultural calendar. German bass Rene Pape appears as King Heinrich and tenor Jonas Kaufmann as Lohengrin. German soprano Anja Harteros sings the part of Elsa and Evelyn Herlitzius is Ortrud.

A preview performance for younger opera-goers Tuesday was strongly applauded. German director Claus Guth's nontraditional staging sets the tale in the Victorian era.

The opener will be broadcast live in 600 cinemas around the world, as well as on Italian state television and radio.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-12-07-Italy-La%20Scala/id-3da7acb610814bdab24706d3021d2cfd

north country brian mcknight sbux nfldraft asante samuel salton sea arizona immigration law

Grammys 'Blew It' With Justin Bieber, Scooter Braun Rants

'This time he deserved to be recognized,' Schoolboy Records mogul tweets shortly after Bieber received zero Grammy nods.
By Jocelyn Vena


Scooter Braun
Photo: John Lamparski/ Getty Images

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1698422/grammys-justin-bieber-scooter-braun.jhtml

Beach Volleyball Olympics 2012 Jessica Ennis Oscar Pistorius Aliya Mustafina Kirk Urso London 2012 Javelin roger federer

Prenatal tests more informative using microarray technology than microscope analysis

ScienceDaily (Dec. 6, 2012) ? A new method for detecting abnormalities in unborn children is providing physicians with more information to analyze the results than conventional, microscopic testing, according to two George Washington University researchers.

Elizabeth Thom, research professor of epidemiology and biostatistics, and Julia Zachary, senior research scientist, are co-authors of the lead article appearing in the current issue of the New England Journal of Medicine showing that microarray technology provides a more comprehensive result from genetic testing during prenatal care of women than the current method of testing, called karyotyping, which relies on visual analysis of the fetal chromosomes.

"Microarray analysis of blood is now standard of care when children or adults present with undiagnosed neurodevelopmental problems since there are a number of serious syndromes that involve small changes on chromosomes which are not seen through a microscope," explained Dr. Thom. "It is a natural extension to want to identify these syndromes prenatally, but research into how to interpret the data is essential."

The GW Biostatistics Center in Rockville, Md. where Dr. Thom and Ms. Zachary are both based was the coordinating center for the multi-site trial. The research was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and led by Columbia University Medical Center.

The trial involved 4,400 patients at 29 centers nationwide and the data took more than four years to compile. The trial's cohort consisted of women over the age of 18 but predominantly over 30, whose fetuses were shown in early screenings to be at a heightened risk for Down syndrome or to have structural abnormalities found through an ultrasound.

The trial found that microarray analysis performed as well as karyotyping in identifying common outcomes involving an abnormal number of chromosomes, which can cause genetic or developmental disorders. It also identified additional abnormalities that were completely undetected by karyotyping.

"Particularly when a prenatal ultrasound has shown anomalies it becomes very important for parents to have an explanation. When the karyotype is normal, microarray analysis will provide additional information in 6 percent of cases. This diagnosis allows parents to plan for early intervention, especially in the case of autism spectrum and other neurodevelopmental disorders," said Ms. Zachary.

Use of microarray for analysis of prenatal samples has only been done in a few laboratories in the U.S. until recently, primarily because of high cost, the difficulty in developing protocols which achieve reliable success rates in DNA extraction from uncultured prenatal samples and the limited experience by genetic counselors and physicians in interpreting the results.

Share this story on Facebook, Twitter, and Google:

Other social bookmarking and sharing tools:


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by George Washington University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ronald J. Wapner, Christa Lese Martin, Brynn Levy, Blake C. Ballif, Christine M. Eng, Julia M. Zachary, Melissa Savage, Lawrence D. Platt, Daniel Saltzman, William A. Grobman, Susan Klugman, Thomas Scholl, Joe Leigh Simpson, Kimberly McCall, Vimla S. Aggarwal, Brian Bunke, Odelia Nahum, Ankita Patel, Allen N. Lamb, Elizabeth A. Thom, Arthur L. Beaudet, David H. Ledbetter, Lisa G. Shaffer, Laird Jackson. Chromosomal Microarray versus Karyotyping for Prenatal Diagnosis. New England Journal of Medicine, 2012; 367 (23): 2175 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1203382

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/OeaTEGUdS5U/121206131604.htm

super bowl halftime show 2012 ahmad bradshaw tom brady halftime super bowl 2012 super bowl score madonna super bowl performance superbowl commercials

Metabolic biomarkers for preventive molecular medicine

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

One of the big challenges of biomedicine is understanding the origin of illnesses in order to improve early detection and significantly increase recovery rates, as well as being able to do what CNIO researchers call preventive molecular medicine, which consists of identifying those individuals who have a greater molecular risk of suffering certain pathologies in order to prevent them. The ageing of the organism, and therefore of the cells and tissues it is made of, represents the greatest risk factor for the majority of developed-world illnesses, including cancer.

A team of scientists from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), led by its director, Mar?a Blasco, together with Jose M. Mato, the director of the Center for Cooperative Research in Biosciences (CIC bioGUNE), has shown that the metabolic profile of an organism indicates its level of cellular ageing and the general state of health in mice. These results could be of great use for preventive molecular medicine, given that they would indicate the state of health quickly and in a non-invasive manner, and that they would help to prevent illnesses or to diagnose them at the earliest stages.

The metabolism is one of the processes which best defines the general state of organisms. With the aim of studying a possible relationship between the metabolism and ageing, the authors of this study have used a new methodology that, based on liquid chromatography techniques and nuclear magnetic resonance, has made it possible to study up to 1.500 metabolites?intermediate products of the metabolism?in 130 mice using very small samples ? just 5-10 ?l of blood serum?.

"Using this new technique, we have seen that the metabolic profile of mice depends on their age; specifically, we have found 48 metabolites that vary very significantly with age", says CNIO researcher Bruno Bernardes de Jes?s, one of the study's authors.

When researchers carried out the same analysis in mice that had increased levels of telomerase ?those that age more slowly, according to a study published recently by the Blasco laboratory in the journal EMBO Molecular Medicine?, they observed that the metabolic footprint was very similar to that of the youngest mice. When they studied mice with telomerase deficiencies ?those that aged more quickly?, they observed a metabolic profile very similar to that of older animals.

Recent studies in humans indicate a possible relationship between the metabolism and life expectancy. "Our large-scale analysis, that analyses a larger amount of metabolites than has ever been studied before, validates the theory that the metabolome faithfully shows cells' biological clocks", says Mato.

NEW BIOMARKERS TO EVALUATE THE STATE OF HEALTH

Ageing is characterised in large part by metabolic decline that implies loss of hepatic, renal, coronary or cardiac function, as well as an increased risk of suffering cancer. In fact, some of the 48 metabolites identified in the study have previously been related to illnesses associated with age, such as Alzheimer's or cardiovascular diseases.

The results of this research may be useful for predicting the overall state of health in humans, via the extraction of a small blood sample. They might also be useful for preventing illnesses related to the passage of time, which make up the majority of deadly diseases in developed countries.

From these results, the researchers are also looking into searching for diagnostic biomarkers that are associated to high-impact socioeconomic illnesses such as diabetes, obesity or cardiovascular diseases.

###

A metabolic signature predicts biological age in mice. Antonia Toms-Loba, Bruno Bernardes de Jesus, Jose M. Mato, Maria A. Blasco. Aging Cell (2012). doi: 10.1111/acel.12025

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncologicas (CNIO): http://www.cnio.es

Thanks to Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncologicas (CNIO) for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 23 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/125708/Metabolic_biomarkers_for_preventive_molecular_medicine

target target walmart nfl nfl best buy sears

WealthTrack Focuses on Impact Investing - Wall Street - eWallstreeter

From: GuruFocus New Articles - 9:13pm - December 2, 2012

By CanadianValue. Read more ? ?Check out Ingrid Dyott Stock Picks ? Download GuruFolio Report of Ingrid Dyott (Updated on 12/01/2012)Related Stocks: SPY, DJI, QQQ,

Continue reading this article ?

Source: http://ewallstreeter.com/wealthtrack-focuses-on-impact-investing-3748/

College Football Scoreboard nfl scores nfl scores redskins Devon Walker Tom Cruise ryan reynolds