![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
?Utilities:Misc Shareware
?Views:16(+9) By?Microsoft Access Data Recovery Password protected or none-password protected MDB file can be easily repaired using SysTools Access Recovery software. It can fix MS access files in just a few clicks either it is partially corrupt or corrupted a lot. Microsoft Access Data Recovery Software repairs damaged and corrupted MS Access (.mdb) files with Tables, Queries, Forms, Reports, Macros and Modules. You can restore damaged Access files after instances of accidental format, software malfunction, virus attacks, unexpected system shutdown or even sabotage. The Software supports MS Access 2000 / 2002(XP) / 2003 and is compatible with Windows 9x / Me / NT / 2000 / XP / 2003 / Vista.With the simple interface it becomes easier to handle the software. Trail version of Access Fix is available for free, demo version recovers all the corrupt MDB files and shows users the preview but restrict them to save the recovered data. At only $69 you can recover all the damaged MDB files and save them. |
|
On this page you never found: nor?crack Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2, nor?serial Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2, nor?serial number, Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2, nor?keygen Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2, nor?key Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2. nor?registration code for Microsoft Access Data Recovery 3.2. Using cracks, key generators, illegal serial numbers and registration codes prevents developing new software.
Source: http://www.vadino.com/utilities/misc/microsoft-access-data-recovery.html
zeitgeist bush ellie goulding ginger aron ralston aron ralston grandparents day
St. Louis Cardinals' David Freese celebrates after Game 7 of baseball's World Series against the Texas Rangers Friday, Oct. 28, 2011, in St. Louis. The Cardinals won 6-2 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
St. Louis Cardinals' David Freese celebrates after Game 7 of baseball's World Series against the Texas Rangers Friday, Oct. 28, 2011, in St. Louis. The Cardinals won 6-2 to win the series. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
Texas Rangers pitcher C.J. Wilson slaps hands with fans at DFW Airport in Grapevine, Texas, early morning Saturday, Oct. 29, 2011. The Texas Rangers lost in seven games to the World Series Champion St. Louis Cardinals. (AP Photo/Mike Fuentes)
ST. LOUIS (AP) ? David Freese swooped in, expecting Elvis Andrus to bunt. He did, but the ball trickled wide of the line.
The St. Louis third baseman scooped up the foul, scanned the crowd and spotted his target sitting near the Texas dugout: a man in the front row wearing a Rangers jacket, with a glove.
Freese flipped him the souvenir, drawing a big smile and making yet another friend in his hometown.
Then again, why not? There was plenty to share in this World Series.
A Game 6 that ranked among baseball's greatest thrillers. A three-homer performance by Albert Pujols that's probably the best hitting show in postseason history. Ron Washington running in place, Tony La Russa reacting in dismay at a ball that got away. Everyone learning how to chant Nap-Oh-Lee!
Oh, and a Rally Squirrel on the scoreboard and a telephone mix-up in the bullpen.
"I told you it was going to be a great series ? and it was," Texas slugger Josh Hamilton said.
Hamilton put Texas ahead with an RBI double in the first inning Friday night in Game 7. Freese and the Cardinals, however, would not be denied. A night after twice rallying when it was one strike from elimination, St. Louis came back to win the championship with a 6-2 victory.
"Now that we've won it, it makes yesterday greater," La Russa said.
Said Hamilton: "It was actually fun to watch and fun to see. You hate it, but it happened."
An October for fans to cherish, for sure. A lot of them tuned in: The clincher drew the most viewers for a baseball game since Boston won in 2004, and boosted overall television ratings 19 percent higher than last year's World Series between Texas and San Francisco.
Even before the opener, many observers predicted this Series would be a dud because it lacked big-market teams. Minus the likes of the Yankees, Red Sox and Phillies, some said, it would attract little attention.
Inning by inning, it got more intriguing.
"I know there's been a lot of conversation about ratings," Commissioner Bud Selig said before Game 7. "Some of it, in my opinion ... was misinformed."
No mistaking that it was quite a run for baseball.
Exactly a month before the Cardinals won their 11th championship, they captured a playoff spot on the final day of the regular season. The night of Sept. 28 was riveting ? St. Louis capped a comeback from 10? games down to overtake Atlanta for the NL wild card, Tampa Bay completed its late surge to beat out Boston for the AL wild card.
The playoffs produced their moments, too. The one that brought winning and losing into a tight focus: Chris Carpenter and the Cardinals celebrating their 1-0 win over Roy Halladay in Philadelphia while star slugger Ryan Howard writhed on the ground, having torn his Achilles tendon during a game-ending groundout.
Soon after, the first Game 7 in the World Series since 2002.
"Somebody said on television, baseball has had a coming-out party since Labor Day. I don't think so. I think it's always there," Selig said. "It's produced for this country really a remarkable chain of events."
In a year punctuated by historic comebacks and epic collapses, it'd be easy to say the biggest rally of all belonged to baseball. That's what many like to say whenever the game shows up well.
Is it true, will that be so?
Selig insists the sport already is more popular than ever. Major league attendance slightly increased this season, ending three seasons of drops. The Chicago Cubs have renewed hope for next year after hiring Theo Epstein to oversee the club, a new ballpark is waiting in Florida for the team that will soon officially become the Miami Marlins.
Certainly a back-and-forth World Series boosted interest, helped by the two most magical words in sports: Game 7.
"There isn't anybody on this team, the other team, too, that when you're a young kid you don't think about winning the World Series, and it's always in Game 7," La Russa said.
Freese delivered the key hit, a two-run double that tied it in the first inning. The MVP of the NL championship series wound up adding the World Series MVP trophy.
He saved the Cardinals' season in Game 6, lining a two-strike, two-out, two-run triple in the ninth and then hitting a winning home run in the 11th.
An inning before Freese connected, Hamilton homered to put Texas ahead. Had the Rangers held on, mostly likely Mike Napoli would've been picked the Series MVP. So, so close.
Freese estimated he got about 45 minutes of sleep as Thursday night turned into Friday. A lot to think about for a player who quit baseball out of high school because it wasn't fun anymore. From done to donating his bat and jersey to the Hall of Fame.
"I'm trying to soak this all in," he said. "I've tried to soak in this whole postseason as much as I can because you never know if it's your last attempt at a title."
Associated Pressuniversity of michigan university of michigan nadal murray cyndi lauper 127 hours 127 hours true grit
Gail Gitcho decamped from Massachusetts' Sen. Scott Brown's team in April to join former Massachusetts' Gov. Mitt Romney's campaign as communications director. She also worked on Romney's 2008 campaign.
Rick Perry elected his communications director from among his inner circle in Texas. Ray Sullivan is not only his communications director for the campaign but also his chief of staff.
Hogan Gidley serves as a frequent spokesman for the Rick Santorum campaign and is sometimes referred to as the national communications director though he works for Virginia firm Brabender Cox. Matt Beynon is the deputy communications director for the campaign, and Virginia Davis is a senior communications adviser. Davis was named campaign spokeswoman in June, but Gidley seems to do more of the talking lately.
Let's not forget the RNC either. Sean Spicer took over as the Republican National Committee's communications director in February. The communications director for the Republican National Convention in Florida (August 27, 2012, for those booking travel plans) will be James Davis, who also had a role in the 2008 GOP convention. He is also a Brunswick Group alum.
There are a few newcomers, too.
Mattheau LeDuc becomes Newt Gingrich's New Hampshire communications director after departing Rep. Michele Bachmann's campaign. Alice Stewart carries on as the Bachmann campaign's spokeswoman even as others defect around her and the Tea Party urges the candidate to give up.
Robert Brockhaus, formerly of the Heritage Foundation, is now Herman Cain's assistant VP of communications. Cain's lead communications director Ellen Carmichael left the campaign earlier this month. More on that communications team from Foreign Policy here.
And if you're looking to get into the race on the other side of things, MoveOn.org is hiring a communications director.Source: http://www.prweekus.com/whos-who-in-gop-communications-directors/article/215449/
weather denver weather denver hpv vaccine hurricane tracking hurricane tracking flat tax flat tax
"Forgive Student Loans" is one of Occupy Wall Street's strongest demands. Today, President Barack Obama unveiled a plan to consolidate college student debt totaling around $1 trillion. Repayment will be income-based. What does this mean for parents and students?
Student college costs
Completing the first two years at a community college and transferring to a four-year school reduces costs. But community college costs are escalating. At most four-year schools, tuition is based on state residency. Community college students must also figure in commuter costs. Muskegon Community College in Michigan estimates out-of-county student costs at about $30,000 for 60 credit hours, plus books, supplies and transportation. The average bachelor's degree costs about $60,000 to $100,000.
Federal Pell grants down
President Obama staved off cuts in the federal Pell grant program. The maximum Pell grant amount is $5,500 per year. But the average student gets about $2,300 per year. That's the amount for parents who gross $50,000 per year, with two kids in college, regardless of their grades. Based on that income, parents are expected to contribute $4,000 per year, per college.
Tuition tax deductions capped
Parents can claim most tuition and fees on their federal income taxes. Some items are deductible under the American Opportunity and Lifetime Learning credit. Room and board or transportation for commuter students are not. The credit is capped at $2,500 and $2,000. Even with grants and tax deductions, about 50 percent to 80 percent of college expenses is pay-as-you-go.
Student loans require cosigner
To get student loans, undergraduate students generally apply for Parent PLUS loan, which requires a parent cosigner. Even students who have taken out vehicle loans need someone to guarantee college loans because the debt incurred is generally large. To protect privacy, parents cannot access student financial aid information without the student, but they are expected to pay any defaulted loans they cosign for.
Parents refuse to cosign
Occupy Wall Street says families shouldn't have to drown in debt or declare financial bankruptcy to help their kids get an education. That's what prevents many parents from cosigning for student loans. Experian says parent credit rating is affected by assumed student debt.
Majority opposes canceling student loans
Rasmussen Reports said 66 percent polled oppose the president's plan. They think federal funds should be spent to assist those who have not gone to college. Some parents, like Chris Tulgestke, of Grand Haven, Mich., believe there are better ways. "Student loans should not be forgiven based on income. Payments should be lowered and stretched out based on income, but not forgiven," Tulgestke says. Twenty-one percent favored forgiving the debt. Kay Wittenhauer of Rochester, N.Y., says, "I feel people who received government funds to pay for college have an advantage over those who had to pay for college themselves, so I'm in favor of the government leveling that playing field."
Marilisa Kinney Sachteleben writes about parenting from 23 years raising four children and 25 years teaching K-8, special needs, adult education and home-school.
star wars blu ray star wars blu ray trans siberian orchestra trans siberian orchestra drive patch adams preamble
PARIS ? France was again forced Thursday to revise down its growth projections for next year, with its GDP expected to increase by just 1 percent.
Worsening global economic conditions have already forced France to cut its forecasts this summer. But President Nicolas Sarkozy promised during a television interview devoted to the European debt crisis that even slower growth would not derail his plans to balance France's budget by 2016.
"We will not deviate from this plan," he said in the interview aired on French television stations TF1 and France-2.
Ahead of next year's presidential elections, Sarkozy has staked his credibility on meeting those targets, despite the fact that France has not balanced its budget in three decades.
He said Thursday that the growth projection for this year remains unchanged at 1.75 percent of GDP. Next year's will slip from an expected 1.75 percent to 1 percent.
Slower growth means France will have to make even more cuts if it is to meet its deficit targets.
Sarkozy said another euro6 billion ($8.4 billion) to euro8 billion ($11.2 billion) needs to be slashed from next year's budget. He said those measures would be announced in the coming days.
bf3 craigslist nc chronicle baked alaska baked alaska all saints day all saints day
An undated photo released by Henry Fricke shows a sampling of dinosaur teeth from the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. Scientists analyzing 32 teeth of plant-eating dinosaurs found that they migrated from the lowlands to highlands in search of food and water during the late Jurassic period. A new study suggests long-necked, plant-eating dinosaurs migrated hundreds of miles to find enough food for their gargantuan appetites. (AP Photo/ Henry Fricke,/Colorado College)
An undated photo released by Henry Fricke shows a sampling of dinosaur teeth from the Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. Scientists analyzing 32 teeth of plant-eating dinosaurs found that they migrated from the lowlands to highlands in search of food and water during the late Jurassic period. A new study suggests long-necked, plant-eating dinosaurs migrated hundreds of miles to find enough food for their gargantuan appetites. (AP Photo/ Henry Fricke,/Colorado College)
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? What did giant plant-munching dinosaurs do when they couldn't find enough to eat in the parched American West? They hit the road. An analysis of fossilized teeth adds further evidence that the long-necked dinosaurs called sauropods ? the largest land creatures ? went on road trips to fill their gargantuan appetites.
Scientists have long theorized that sauropods foraged for precious resources during droughts because of their preserved tracks and long limbs that were "ideal moving machines" and allowed them to cover long distances, said paleobiologist Matthew Bonnan of Western Illinois University.
The latest study is the best evidence yet that at least one kind of sauropod "took to the hills in search of food when times got tough in the lowlands," said paleontologist Kristi Curry Rogers at Macalester College in Minnesota.
The new work, published online Wednesday by the journal Nature, was led by geologist Henry Fricke of Colorado College.
The researchers analyzed 32 sauropod teeth collected in Wyoming and Utah. The teeth came from massive plant-eaters that roamed a semi-arid basin in the American West during the late Jurassic period about 150 million years ago.
The largest sauropods weighed 100 tons and were 120 feet long. The type in the study was smaller ? about 60 feet in length and weighing 25 tons.
Scientists can get a glimpse into the source of the dinosaurs' drinking water by comparing the oxygen preserved in the tooth enamel to that found in ancient sediment.
A chemical analysis showed differences in the teeth and the basin where the dinosaurs were buried, meaning they must have wandered hundreds of miles from the flood plains to the highlands for food and water.
Fricke said the movement appeared to be tied to changing seasons. Sauropods left the basin in the summer for higher elevations ? a trek that took about five months ? and returned in the winter.
In lush times, sauropods would have feasted on a diversity of plants including ferns, horsetails, conifers and moss, said John Foster, a curator at the Museum of Western Colorado, who had no part in the research.
___
Online:
Journal: http://www.nature.com/nature
___
Follow Alicia Chang's coverage at http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia
Associated Pressbcs standings bcs standings waldorf school waldorf school new orleans saints world series game 4 world series game 4
WASHINGTON ? Rival deficit-cutting plans advanced by Republicans and Democrats on Congress' secretive supercommittee would both mean smaller-than-expected cost of living benefit increases for veterans and federal retirees as well as Social Security recipients and bump up taxes for some individuals and families, according to officials familiar with the recommendations.
In all, the changes would reduce deficits by an estimated $200 billion over a decade, a fraction of the committee's minimum goal of $1.2 trillion in savings.
A final decision by the panel on legislation to reduce deficits is still a few weeks off, and given the political difficulties involved, there is no certainty that the six Republicans and six Democrats will be able to agree.
The two sides exchanged initial offers earlier this week, and each side swiftly found fault with the others' proposal in the privacy of the committee's rooms as well as in public.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, noting published reports that Democrats are seeking $3 trillion in higher taxes, said, "This is the same number that was in the president's budget, the same number that ? that they ? I don't know that they found any Democrats in the House and Senate to vote for."
"I don't think it's a reasonable number," he said. Boehner also chided Democrats for recommending $50 billion in savings from Medicaid over the next decade, well below what Republicans are seeking.
"Let's understand over the next 10 years, we're going to spend $10 trillion on Medicaid. I just think there's a lot more room there to help find common ground," he said.
At the same time, Boehner emphasized, "I am committed to getting to an outcome" that clears the committee and Congress. The speaker negotiated privately with President Barack Obama over the summer in deficit-reduction talks that failed to produce an agreement.
At a news conference of her own, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California said she wanted a compromise that was "big, bold and balanced," a phrase that Democrats use to convey an insistence on higher tax revenue.
She pointedly declined to embrace what Democrats had presented to the supercommittee. She called it "Sen. Baucus' package," a reference to the Montana Democrat and chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. That ran directly counter to his aides' statements earlier in the week that he was speaking for a majority of Democrats on the panel ? and tacit confirmation that at least two of the party's members had not signed on as supporters.
Ironically, while the Republican and Democratic panel members remain far apart, one of the relatively few items in common was a potentially controversial recommendation to change the calculation for annual cost-of-living increases in federal programs as well as the yearly adjustments in income tax brackets.
According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the recommended change "produces lower estimates of inflation than the traditional" measurement of the Consumer Price Index. Since December 2000 the difference on average has amounted to 0.3 percentage points, according to the agency.
A decision to base annual cost of living increases on the new calculation would lower Social Security costs by $108 billion over a decade, and the impact on benefits for federal civilian and military pension programs and veterans' benefits would save an additional $23 billion, according to calculations made in February 2010.
Congressional experts said the list of federal programs that would be affected is extensive, and included Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps and more, but the absence of a written description by either side in the deficit negotiations makes a complete listing impossible.
Officials in both parties said their plans would affect income tax brackets, which currently are adjusted annually to make sure that inflation alone does not expose more earnings to taxation.
By slowing the rate of the adjustment, more income would be taxed than is currently forecast, a change that Congress' Joint Tax Committee recently estimated would produce $59.6 billion in revenue to the Treasury over a decade.
Just as changes to Social Security and benefit programs are politically problematic for Democrats, tax increases are difficult for Republicans.
Americans for Tax Reform, an organization led by anti-tax advocate Grover Norquist, earlier this year said slowing the pace at which tax brackets are adjusted for inflation "would most certainly be a tax hike."
There was one caveat, though.
"This idea can of course be part of a discussion of comprehensive and revenue-neutral tax reform, but stand-alone it is a tax hike."
Both Republicans and Democrats included tax reform in their presentations inside the supercommittee, and the issue has great political appeal.
But the two sides differ dramatically on the details. Democrats called for tax reform that would generate an additional $1 trillion in revenue over a decade, while Republicans said they envisioned no increase.
ashram ashram 60 minutes bcs merce cunningham mona simpson mona simpson
Cancer patient Jimmy Carlson was evicted from his Marseilles home this week. (CBS)
MARSEILLES, Ill. (CBS) ? A small town is supposed to be where people care most.
But the downstate village of Marsailles evicted a 65-year-old man from his lifelong home because he did didn?t pay a $6,000 sewer bill. It happened just days after he got home from cancer surgery, CBS 2?s Derrick Blakley reports.
Jimmy Carlson?s lifelong home sits just beyond the village?s own welcome sign. But last week, sheriff?s deputies paid an unwelcome visit, tossing out his belongings and evicting him, all because of the unpaid sewer bill.
For 65 years, the home is the only place Jimmy has ever lived. The sewer bills, about $28 dollars a month, started mounting years ago, and his wife, Patti, admits she was inattentive.
?That responsibility was on me. But as an active alcoholic, things slipped, priorities slipped,? she says.
She?s been sober four years, but consumed again recently with Jimmy?s health problems. The sheriff showed up for the eviction, just four days after he got home from lung cancer surgery.
Doctors got the tumor. The village got his house.
The Carlsons were helpless as scavengers picked through their belongings.
?People even came and took their underwear. They have only?one set of underwear right now. It?s horrible, it?s disgusting,? neighbor Stephanie Miskell Engel says.
City officials say they had been working with the Carlsons for five or six years to try to clear up the overdue sewer bills, but the?family simply wouldn?t pay. On Thursday, no one at the city level wanted to talk on camera about the eviction.
?It might be legally right, but it?s morally wrong,? neighbor Butch Simmons says.
The Carlsons? back sewer bills total around $10,000 ? that?s about $6,000 in sewer charges and $4,000 in court costs.
The village of Marsailles now owns the home. The Carlsons have another financial problem as well. The city attorney says they?re also about $10,000 behind on their property taxes as well.
The couple is living temporarily with a friend in nearby Ottawa.
Source: http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2011/10/27/village-has-cancer-patient-evicted-over-sewer-bill/
penn state football itunes match itunes match gazelle gazelle pumpkin carving patterns pumpkin carving patterns
James Van Der Beek & Wife Kimberly Expecting Second Child
James Van Der Beek and his wife Kimberly are expecting their second child! James, who is most known for his role as Dawson in “Dawson’s [...]
James Van Der Beek & Wife Kimberly Expecting Second Child Stupid Celebrities Gossip Stupid Celebrities Gossip News
Source: http://stupidcelebrities.net/2011/10/26/james-van-der-beek-wife-kimberly-expecting-second-child/
los angeles weather portia de rossi portia de rossi herman cain for president herman cain for president pumpkin bread pumpkin bread