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Moving Bliss

Posted: 10/11/2011



(NAPSI)--The next time you plan to move, you won’t be alone. Nearly 20 percent of Americans move each year, with most moves occurring during the summer months. With an average of 60 tasks to do to prepare, important decisions can slip through the cracks in the moving crate.

To help, HGTV designer Lisa LaPorta and new-product journalist David Gregg, senior editor, Behindthebuy.com, recommend a few tips. These experts say that moving doesn’t have to be stressful—as long as you incorporate the right technology with the right design elements.

Both Gregg and LaPorta recommend getting the appointment to have cable television, phone and high-speed Internet services connected before the move. Having them installed on your arrival day means you can go online to determine room layouts and shop for furniture, call out for pizza, and entertain the kids while unpacking. There’s a website, www.cablemover.com, that makes the process easy. And while you’re there, you’ll discover additional tech and design tips.

Gregg suggests that moving is a great time for introducing new technologies to organize and de-stress your living environment.

“The average person has five to six remotes sitting around on the coffee table,” he said. “Moving is a perfect time to clear out the clutter and get down to one. Upgrading to a universal remote is affordable and newer models are simple to both program and use.”

Also, Gregg recommends hiding all your tech equipment behind closed doors or in other, less-traveled rooms. Using a radio frequency extender, you can keep your DVD player and other electronics from view and still operate them from up to 100 feet away. 

As a designer, LaPorta agrees. “Because technology has become woven into so many different facets of our lives, there’s a lot to think about from both a design and technology standpoint when setting up your new home,” she says. “In fact, designers have coined a term for this phenomenon: techorating.”

LaPorta urges movers to think about the electronics they own and what they will do with them in their new homes. 

“For instance, it’s both costly and a hassle to move a 15-year-old, heavy, space-and-energy-hog TV set,” she says. “Consider purchasing a space-saving and design-friendly, slim new ENERGY STAR−rated TV. It can put as much as $58 per year back in your wallet while cutting your carbon footprint.”





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Lifestyles

A Civil Senator

by Jeffrey R. Lewis
Posted: 10/18/2011

Jeffrey R. Lewis
Jeffrey R. Lewis

(NAPSI)—A U.S. senator who put voters' interests before the politics of the day and a moderate Republican who valued and cared about rebuilding this nation's human and physical infrastructure, John Heinz also understood that bipartisanship, civility and integrity were the roots of legislative success and political longevity.

In a speech to the American Association of University Women, Sen. Heinz's comments reflected the mind-set of a passionate, caring and thinking Republican legislator who clearly understood the pulse of the American people, and his words still echo the issues Congress cannot overcome:

"We are losing our tolerance of diversity, our understanding of different circumstances and points of view, and goodwill toward those who reflect those differences," he said. "If I am right, it should be a grave concern to you and all Americans. I think the reason for this failure of spirit is a lack of confidence; a lack of confidence in our leaders, our institutions and even ourselves. We Americans have always been renowned for our ability to meet and conquer tough problems...."

What John Heinz discussed then is unfortunately still true today. He was elected in an era when civility was woven into the fabric of the legislative process. Name-calling, if it did occur, was left to the back rooms, not a public forum and certainly not the floor of the U.S. Congress. No one, Republican or Democrat, would have tolerated the callous disregard for the presidency of the United States.

During Sen. Heinz's era, respect for the legislative process was paramount. These legislative colleagues certainly disagreed on many issues but it was always about the substance.

In a speech to the graduates of Wilkes College, Sen. Heinz shared his definition of leadership:

"Real leadership, whether it is political, economic or moral, involves persuading people to do something now that will bear fruit in the future. But too many people live only in the short term. Instead of clearly seeing what is demanded of us in this changing world...of learning from the past, instead of charting a new course for tomorrow, too many Americans are allowing themselves to be manipulated into quarreling with the past and denying the realities of the future...Americans risk losing the future and missing the great opportunities that lie before us as a nation."

John Heinz unabashedly supported policies that his party may not have agreed with because they were in the best interests of his constituents and often the American people as a whole.

Sen. John Heinz understood that bipartisanship was not a one-way street. His death left a significant void, and a dearth of passion and certainly pragmatism.

• Jeffrey Lewis was the Republican staff director for Senator Heinz and can be reached at jeffrey13@ehimrx.com.

 

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