Sunday, July 31, 2011

Britain, Japan warn of disaster if no U.S. debt deal (Reuters)

LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) ? British and Japanese officials warned Sunday of disastrous consequences for the global economy if last-minute talks among lawmakers in Washington failed to agree on raising the U.S. borrowing limit and averting a debt default.

Governments across the world fear that because of the key role of the U.S. dollar in global banking and trading systems, there could be severe instability when Asian financial markets reopen Monday if a U.S. debt deal is not in sight by then.

In Washington, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, the top Senate Republican who is playing a key role in the debt talks, said "we're very close" to a $3 trillion deal that would raise the debt ceiling while cutting the U.S. budget deficit.

But a senior White House official warned that an agreement was "not there yet."

"If they get this one wrong and there's a default -- we don't expect that, we think that they will sort this out -- but if that were to happen, it has consequences for every family and every business in this country and all across the world," said Danny Alexander, Chief Secretary to the British Treasury.

"I think in the end the politicians on Capitol Hill can see that the precipice they are looking over is one that they are going to step back from," Alexander told BBC television.

"But it is something that would have a big effect on the global financial system and on the global economy, where the United States is one of our major trading partners, that could have really big implications for the United Kingdom."

In Tokyo, sources familiar with Japan's international and monetary affairs said they were increasingly concerned that markets might be too optimistic about prospects for a lasting solution to the crisis.

Japanese officials still hope Washington can strike a deal and if that proves impossible, will give priority to interest payments to international holders of U.S. Treasury debt to limit the immediate market impact, the sources said.

But Tokyo's concern is that if the crisis drags on without a clear and long-term solution, markets may be thrown into turmoil in the same way that they suffered when U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed in September 2008.

"If there is a default, the impact on global markets will be huge," said one of the sources, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Another Japanese source said, "Nobody thought Washington would let Lehman collapse. But look what happened."

U.S. lawmakers have set themselves a Tuesday deadline to reach agreement and the U.S. Treasury has said it will run out of borrowing room on that day, although analysts think the government may have enough cash to keep servicing its debt and paying its bills through the middle of this month.

CHINA

Britain is the third largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury debt and Japan is the second largest. China is the biggest with well over $1 trillion invested in U.S. Treasuries; about two-thirds of its $3.2 trillion of foreign exchange reserves are estimated to be held in dollar assets.

Saturday the official People's Daily newspaper, the mouthpiece of the Chinese Communist Party, castigated the U.S. handling of the debt crisis in an editorial as "irresponsible" and "immoral."

It said the U.S. democratic system was to blame for the "farce," claiming that "not a single representative has considered the world, and even U.S. national interests are being banished from the mind."

Friday a senior economic policymaker in the euro zone, who declined to be named, told Reuters he was optimistic Washington would solve the problem but expressed surprise and anger that U.S. politicians were "playing chicken" with an issue of such importance for the global economy.

Euro zone leaders are struggling to control sovereign debt crises in several countries in their region, and the U.S. debt problem is making this more difficult by adding to upward pressure on the yields of government bonds in those weak states.

If there is no U.S. debt deal by Monday morning, central banks around the world are expected to stand ready to provide emergency supplies of money to commercial banks in case the banks become too nervous to lend to each other.

Japan's first defense will be to ensure that Japanese financial institutions have a sufficient supply of dollars, the sources in Tokyo indicated.

The Bank of Japan believes Japanese commercial banks have sufficient dollar cushions but will use its dollar swap arrangement with other central banks to prevent a dollar squeeze in case of market turmoil.

In late June, the U.S. Federal Reserve agreed to extend liquidity swap arrangements with other major central banks until August 1, 2012.

The Japanese central bank is also prepared to flood markets with yen through its open market operations in case interbank borrowing costs spike, BOJ officials say.

In Europe, there were minor signs of strain in the money markets last week with some banks becoming unable to take out longer-term dollar loans, but the effect was small since banks still expected Washington would reach a deal.

The European Central Bank already offers unlimited euro loans to banks in some of its money market operations as part of its response to past crises, and it could use that policy to cope with any market problems this week.

A spokesman for the Swiss central bank said, "The Swiss National Bank is ready to react appropriately at any time to market disruptions."

(Writing by Andrew Torchia; Editing by David Cowell)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110731/ts_nm/us_usa_debt_world

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The Best Deal of the Day [Dealzmodo]

This summer has sucked. There aren't any good songs out, it's hot as balls all the time, people are getting murdered, nobody can fix the debt ceiling, my back hurts, and everyone has a pretty new MacBook Air except me. I'm sick of it all. You know what would be nice? To be a kid again. Carefree. Innocent. Ever-healthy. Optimistic. I really want to just bounce around in a god damn inflatable castle all day—that's what I really want. Luckily, I can make that happen for just $150. I'm going to buy this, blow it up on my roof, and just bounce around all damn day, bouncing, and bouncing, and sobbing, and bouncing. So long, suckers. -SB More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/cpqOdGkUqoI/the-best-deal-of-the-day

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Saturday, July 30, 2011

Team Millar rides 'In Style' ? Weirview's Blog

Ian Millar says he couldn?t be more proud of his offspring who are not only following in his footsteps, but are excelling in the sport of show jumping.

The accomplished international rider grins with pride as he talks about Jonathon, 36, and Amy, 34, who all comprise Team Millar.

?If I were to leave here tomorrow, I would be satisfied knowing that Jonathon and Amy could run this place just fine,? Millar said during an informal interview at Millar Brooke Farm, just south of Perth.

It?s home for all three Millars; each has his or her own place on the 650-acre farm that Ian and his late wife Lynn founded in 1972? about the same time Ian began his Olympic quest.

Next year in London will be his world record breaking 10th appearance in the Olympics, where he is still chasing that elusive gold medal. He will be 65 when that happens. He says he may possibly be the oldest athlete in the competition.

?I don?t see too many 65-year-old sprinters? or swimmers,? he says with a laugh.

This veteran showman is far from retirement.

They recently returned home from a successful competition at Spruce Meadows in Calgary, Alberta.

His list of accomplishments is staggering. Medals, photos, trophies and other memorabilia from national and international competitions cover his office walls, shelves, desk and tables.

He sits behind his desk in a big, fat comfy leather chair; leans back, stretches his? towering frame into even longer lengths, and clasps his hands behind his head. He?s thoughtful for a moment.

He talks about the variables at play during competitions like the Pan American Games or the Olympics? even the more local events, like the National Capital Show Jumping Tournament in Nepean, August 10 to 14 and 17 to 21, 2011, at the Nepean National Equestrian Park. He is the honourary chair as one of the founding members of the tournament.

?You have to have three things to be successful,? he says. ?You have to be a student; you have to persevere and you have to work hard.?

He has been a student of the sport since he first sat on a horse more than a half-century ago at age 10. There is always something to learn, he says. He has persevered ? nine Olympics is testament to that ?? and he works hard.

?It doesn?t matter what the competition is,? Ian says. ?You have to make sure you have done your homework.?

He gives a little insight as to what that homework is all about. It?s like preparing for a high school exam. ?You have to study all the chapters, not just one or two, and pray the questions will be asked from either one or the other chapters that you have studied.?

The biggest part of his homework is to watch the course designer and how that architecture evolves. It?s about the height of the bars, the width of the jump, the decorations around it, and how the horse sees those changes.

?I have to be able to perceive where that course designer is going in the design of the jumps and how it will evolve. I have to be about five steps ahead of him.?

Will the liverpool have a flowered edge ? something that can make the horse hesitate or prance around it; will the depth perception be wider than the actual jump itself?

?It?s all about how the horse sees these jumps,? Ian explains. It?s about eye exercises and training both himself and his horse to see things that may or may not be there. The jumps are all about optical illusions and each course designer has his or her own signature snafu that they want to be known for, Ian explains? to stump a horse and rider.

How did his horses do at the latest Spruce Meadows? competition?

?Oh they sailed right through it,? he beams.

For next year?s Olympics, or even the fall?s Pan AM Games, he says he?s even more prepared. And this time, he has more options in terms of mounts.

During Big Ben days there was just Big Ben and three consecutive Olympic showings: fourth in L.A. in 1984; fourth in Seoul in ?88 and ninth in Barcelona in ?92.

?We?re deeper in top horses now,? he says. ?And any one is capable (of winning gold).?

His mounts include In Style, Star Power and Dryden. It was aboard In Style, the chestnut beauty, that he earned a team silver in Beijing in 2008. This year?s Pan American Games Oct. 25 to 29 will be held at the Guadalajara Country Club in Guadalajara, Mexico. Amy will be aboard on Costa Rica Z, a 16-year-old Holsteiner mare owned by Matthews and Millar Brooke Farm Inc. and Jonathon will have Contino, a 14-year-old Holsteiner gelding owned by Millar Brooke Farm. Star Power is a 10-year-old Dutch-bred gelding owned by Team Works, while Dryden is a 10-year-old Belgian Warmblood stallion owned by Susan and Ariel Grange.

Gearing up for Nepean, Ian says it?s a great opportunity for Team Millar to perform locally in Ottawa at the National Capital Show Jumping Tournament, taking place from Aug. 10 to 14 and 17-21,? at the Nepean National Equestrian Park, located at the Moodie Drive exit of the 417 Queensway.

The first week of competition is highlighted by Sunday?s $25,000 Hayes Co. Grand Prix. Other featured events include the $10,000 Open Welcome, the $10,000 Peel Maryborough Mutual Insurance Company/Henry Equestrian Insurance Brokers Ltd. Modified Grand Prix on Saturday, Aug.13, and the $5,000 Broccoli Hill Hunter Derby.

AMY

The blond curls poke out of the back of her pink Grand Prix ball cap. She?s hidden behind her MacBook and has the phone cradled on her shoulder. It?s the administration efforts at Millar Brooke Farm that keeps her busy inside the barn, tucked away in her office overlooking the arena. With a business degree in administration from Ryerson University in Toronto, Amy Millar says she wouldn?t want to be anywhere else. She tried that for a while, like most young women who experimented with other things, and a variety of sports, but she found her way home.

She says she loves the competition and has her sights set on becoming an international competitor.

?I love to ride, but I really love the competition,? she said. ?That?s the means to the end? I enjoy the horses and the process and each day I learn to understand them more and more. Each one is an individual. X plus Y does not always equal Z, and it?s never boring here.?

Life on the farm is really ?all encompassing? and she and her partner, Brad, and their one-year-old daughter Lily complete her.

?I always knew this place was a part of my life. It?s a big commitment, a lot of luck and a lot of travel,? she says.

Growing up, Amy says she was given every opportunity to ride and to train. Travelling as a family was something that brought them all closer together.

What?s it like being Ian?s daughter?

?He?s a hard worker and he expects everyone around him to work just as hard,? she says. ?He?s a worker? he cares and he gives the utmost attention to detail. He expects nothing less than everything.?

Amy says Ian ? which is what she and her brother call him at work and not ?Dad? ? encourages them and is supportive every step of the way. When competing, the three are a team and not individuals, but there is a little pride when she one-ups her father in competition.

JONATHON

Working with the horses, building stock, doing research? that?s what Jonathon enjoys about life on Miller Brooke Farm. He too came back to his roots after a few years in Europe, the United States and various points between. He describes his life as ?a lot of fun? and working as a family very rewarding.

?We all share a common goal and that is for each of us to be successful, and for our students to be successful. It?s a fun business to be in right now.?

He says the family travels up to 30 weeks a year and there is never a dull moment.

?Having Ian?s strength and knowledge to draw on is very valuable,? Jonathon says.

Ian says that having his children?s input is also important in the business. ?All the great ideas of the future will come from young people,? Ian says. ?And you better accept, embrace, utilize and adjust to it or you will make yourself irrelevant.?

Ian says his son and daughter have surprised him with their input in the past, ?but now I expect it.?

LYNN

Ian?s eyes swim with memories of pain and passion when he speaks about his late wife, Lynn, who died in March, 2008, after battling two bouts of cancer.

They were married almost 40 years. Ian remembers their courting days.

?I?d just hop on a horse and trot on over and see her,? he says with a smile. ?She was a lot of fun.?

And she was an integral part of this family. She was an accomplished horsewoman who rode right up until she was pregnant with Jonathon then she stopped riding. She became the barn manager and worked the business side and raised the children.

Together, Ian and Lynn built their business, which began in 1972 and now hosts a first-rate training facility.? The property features three barns, an indoor arena, a grass ring, a sand ring, a walker, trails and many paddocks.

Ian thanks a Perth physician, Dr. Ross McLean, for giving him extra time with Lynn. She was diagnosed with fourth-stage cancer, but that wasn?t her demise, Ian says. It was a second cancer that took her life. But it was thanks to a trip to the Mayo Clinic in Florida that extended her life by a few years. It was on the suggestion of an oilman friend, whose selfless offer to pay for an expensive cocktail of medicines to treat Lynn?s condition ? and some alternative medicinal methods ? that extended Lynn?s life by a few years.

?It was unbelievable,? Ian says. ?For someone to offer to pay for something like that? it just goes to show you that there are people who give so selflessly of themselves. Lynn?s life was extended because of his kindness and because of Dr. McLean in Perth, who helped make it happen.?

BIG BEN

No one horse will replace the gentle giant that helped give Ian his nickname, ?Captain Canada.? It was aboard Ben that he became Canada?s most decorated horseman.

Ian and Ben?s contribution to the sport is unparalleled: back-to-back World Cup Champion, Nations Cup victories, Pan American double gold medalist, du Maurier International Champion, and more than 50 major Grand Prix titles? not to mention the bronze statue in Stewart Park in Perth.

Ben was 23 when he developed colic for the third time. He had been retired since 1994 and ridden by Ian for 10 years. Ben survived two previous fights with colic and a traffic accident before colic hit him again in 1999 and took his life.

Jonathon says Ben and Ian?s farewell tour was one that will be remembered by many fans around the world. ?It was a chance for the public to say goodbye to Ben before he was retired,? Jonathon says. ?He was ridden all the time after retirement ? he wasn?t just put out to pasture ? and that was great for Ben because he was used to that lifestyle.?

Jonathon says he was in Europe that fatal day, December 16, 1999.

?It was a sad day for sure? for a lot of people.?

But like rebuilding a sports team, Jonathon says the horse stock at Millar Brooke Farm has never been better and Team Millar has never been more prepared to rock? and jump.

Source: http://weirviewphotography.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/team-millar-rides-in-style/

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Hestra Hires New Marketing Team | Skiing Business

(Golden, Colo.)-HESTRA, the leading international glove brand in skiing, cycling, outdoor recreation and leisure, announced the addition of a marketing and communications firm and a Lifestyle Marketing Manager to manage the company?s public relations and communications strategy, online marketing, social media and team and event management in the U.S.

HESTRA has hired 8150 Consulting out of Vail, Colo., to manage the company?s overall communications and public relations strategy. Beth Jahnigen Pappas and Jamie Wilson Gunion, co-principals of 8150 Consulting, bring over 25 years combined experience in marketing, public relations and strategic partnerships to HESTRA. Pappas has 13 years experience with marketing, communications and events in the outdoor and winter sports industries having previously worked at Mountain Sports Media (SKI, SKIING & FREEZE), Copper Mountain Resort, Factory Design Labs and the Vail Recreation District. Gunion has 13 years experience with crisis communications, strategic planning, marketing and public relations having worked with the Town of Vail Public Information Office, Copper Mountain Resort and the Vail Recreation District.

Beth Pappas, left, and Jamie Gunion

Beth Pappas, left, and Jamie Gunion

To elevate the company?s online marketing and team management strategies, HESTRA hired independent consultant Nick Moscia, of Denver, who brings a strong understanding of brand marketing, social media, team management and a passion for snowboarding into the company. Moscia?s experience includes working with Optic Nerve, Core Action Group, Woodward Skateparks, ESPN X Games Skatepark and Van Skateparks.

According to HESTRA USA President Dino Dardano, the company continues to see solid growth in the U.S. market and by hiring 8150 Consulting and Moscia it is planning for future growth.

?We continue elevate our presence in the U.S. market including the recent launch of our bike collection and our entry into the snowboard market this winter,? said Dardano. ?8150 and Nick are an investment to ensure our consumers and retailers are informed about HESTRA?s business and products.?

For more information, go to www.hestragloves.com, e-mail info@hestrausa.com or call 888-939-9969. For media inquiries or photo and product requests, e-mail pr@hestrausa.com or call 970-471-5352 or 970-331-5568.

About HESTRA: A Glove for Every Hand In 2011, HESTRA will celebrate 75 years as one the world?s top manufacturer of gloves. The company HESTRA was founded in 1936 in Sm?land, Sweden by farmer Martin Magnusson, who began producing durable leather gloves for lumberjacks. Four generations later, HESTRA is still run by the Magnusson family and produces gloves for winter sports enthusiasts, outdoor recreation, mountaineering, mountain biking and cycling, casual wear and for the workforce. HESTRA selects natural materials, such as leather and wool, and develops gloves with the user?s needs and area of use in mind. Currently, HESTRA produces over 200 glove models with a diversity that allows users to find their exact HESTRA glove in terms of fit, function and style.

Source: http://skiingbusiness.com/6296/newswire/press-release/hestra-hires-new-marketing-team/

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Friday, July 29, 2011

Risk Investing from Myanmar to Florida

07/27/11 Vancouver, British Columbia ? ?Why don?t you move to Myanmar for six or eight months,? a friend suggested a few months back. ?Seriously. You go down there, get a feel for the place, buy a bunch of beachfront real estate and wait for the military junta to collapse. It?s a long term play, sure, and it?s pretty speculative. But it?s not as crazy as it sounds, really.

?Vietnam and Thailand have long been exposed to the region?s tourism industry,? he continued. ?They?re already developed, more or less. But the real bargain in that part of the world has got to be Myanmar. It has an enormous coastline and, unlike Vietnam and Thailand, dynamite fishing hasn?t destroyed the coral reef there.

?There are literally hundreds and hundreds of miles of pristine, untouched beaches. It?s truly paradisaical?and paradises usually don?t stay untouched forever. Someone eventually comes in and makes good for the place. Then prices really go through the roof. Play it right and you could end up sitting on the next Phuket, the next Nha Trang. An entrepreneurial individual could really clean up. Think about it.?

We recalled this advice yesterday, while talking to another mate here in Vancouver. Our Vancouver friend was telling us about a real estate bargain in another risky part of the world: Florida.

?Four blocks from the beach?in Delray?three bedrooms?$75k,? he told us. ?And there are plenty of others just like it.?

?Sounds like a bargain,? we replied. ?But do you really want to dive into the US real estate market? Now??

?In all honesty, I think we could see another ten, maybe fifteen percent drop in housing. But in places like Florida, like Nevada and Arizona, where prices have already come down so far, a drop of that magnitude isn?t going to break the bank.?

Good point. Depressed real estate in certain key parts of the US might offer a pretty attractive risk profile for property speculators. How far can a $75k house fall, after all? Provided you?re not loaded to the hilt with debt, provided you can cover up front expenses, settle in cash, a little bottom fishing might be a reasonable idea. Who knows?

But what do Burmese beachfront lots and Floridian vacation homes have to do with investing, you?re wondering? Quite a bit, actually. In many ways, it cuts right to the heart of this year?s conference theme ? Fight or Flight: Your Capital at Risk. Do you stick it out at home, dig in your heals and ?fight.? Or do you pack up your belongings and head for some exotic, dynamite-free zone abroad? Where?s the risk?and where?s the opportunity?

?I?m from The People?s Republic of California,? announced Rick Rule, perennial favorite at the Agora Financial Investment Symposium, from the podium yesterday. ?You think there?s no political risk there? Or how about Australia, where they?ve decided that companies that invest decades of time and capital into bringing resources to market, often during periods of marginal profitability, must now pay windfall profits taxes for the privilege of doing business there. And that?s on top of all the usual taxes and bribes they must already pay there.?

Rick was making the simple but important point that risk profiles change over time. Places that were previously thought of as ?safe bets,? as ?market friendly,? may not be as safe and friendly as they first appear. These places would include Australia, much of the US and, as Rick put it, ?Albertastan? here in Canada. Conversely, many frontier markets offer opportunities most people will never take the time to investigate.

Doug Clayton, managing partner at Leopard Capital, echoed Rick?s point. Doug looks for opportunities in markets few people bother considering. He offered four ?sunrise? economies in his presentation. All have attractive demographic trends, boast robust national resource profiles and offer cheap labor. And they?re all growing at about two or three times the pace of the world?s ?developed? nations.

Doug made the case for, wait for it?Bangladesh, Haiti, Cambodia, and Ethiopia. Sound crazy? Good, Doug says. Who wants to buy into a popular market anyway? Isn?t that the whole point of investing, going were most fear to tread, getting in early and then cashing out when the herd arrives? Food for thought?

?So you?d spend a few months of the year in Delray?? we asked our mate.

?That would be the idea, yeah. We?re just looking at the moment, but there really are some attractive deals. We?ll see, I guess.?

?Worst case scenario,? added his wife, ?we?ve got a vacation home in Florida, right by the beach.?

?Not terrible,? your editor agreed. ?But tell me, have you thought about Myanmar??

Joel Bowman
for The Daily Reckoning

Joel Bowman

Joel Bowman is managing editor of The Daily Reckoning. After completing his degree in media communications and journalism in his home country of Australia, Joel moved to Baltimore to join the Agora Financial team. His keen interest in travel and macroeconomics first took him to New York where he regularly reported from Wall Street, and he now writes from and lives all over the world.

Articles and commentary featured on the Daily Reckoning are presented by Agora Financial. For even more insights, feedback, and comments visit The Daily Reckoning on Facebook .
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Source: http://dailyreckoning.com/risk-investing-from-myanmar-to-florida/

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Satellite Phone Systems | Articles Triumph

Satellite phone techniques are essentially finding popular on account of the requirement for people to communicate even inside the remote corner about the globe. Conversation takes new strides of their very own and mere contacts and radio lines aren?t capable to fulfill the growing requirement for wider coverage.

Satellite phone techniques are really important, because the cable lines cannot be fixed to any or all the many elements from the world and in addition the bandwidth of radio wavelengths, which connected the vast majority with the parts on the leading of earth, is exhausted. The satellite phone techniques include Reduced Earth Revolving about (LEO) satellites. LEO satellites are desired to geo stationary satellites considering that the latter introduces delay. This delay created by geo stationary satellite can vary working with the distance where it is placed. Minimal delay is all about .5 seconds and this is often a significant drawback to geo stationary satellites as a result we use for LEO satellites that are presently a component through the satellite phone programs.

The machine of satellite phones include not really a single LEO satellite, but a constellation of LEO satellites, this is accomplished since the LEO satellites are put near to the earth and they also revolve faster compared to earth which makes them invisible sometimes. Then when one satellite is moving from the horizon, another LEO satellite pops up near by to get the calls. The technology implemented through the satellite phones is dependent on the kind of service companies like Global Star systems and Iridium systems. Satellite phone systems likewise incorporate the different techniques employed for the transmission of information, whether it is audio or video signals.

Some companies such as the Iridium uses time division multiple access plan to improve the amount of calls that may be attended. It?s satellite-to-satellite connections as part of the phone systems thus mobile phone models work directly using the satellites. Another satellite phones system, the Global Star implements new technology known as code division multiple access and satellites for attending the traffic of calls.

Within this system, satellites are utilized only as relay stations that?s, they receive and forward calls towards the gateways on earth and also the call reaches the general public switched telephone network. No matter the technology used, the primary goal from the satellite phone systems and service companies is to have their clients in touch wherever they?re going.

Discover out much more info about Satellite phone sales with my top recommended satellite phone plans blog.

Source: http://articlestriumph.com/communications/satellite-phone-systems

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Friday, July 1, 2011

Getting Your Certified Nursing Assistant Certificate Replaced

[unable to retrieve full-text content]For anyone who has lost their certified nursing assistant certificate, you can still get a replacement card if you know what to do. There may sometimes be a fee that is associated with this, but you can easily do it online or through the postal service. You will need to get a hold of the Board of Nursing to help better determine what you will need to do or need in order to receive your replacement from and to get you in touch with them.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/6391180

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