Saturday, February 4, 2012

PFT: Ward talking to Steelers about returning

Divisional Playoffs - New York Giants v Green Bay PackersGetty Images

Bills DL Marcell Dareus thinks that Tom Brady is able to successfully lobby officials for flags during games.

The Dolphins want Sun Life Stadium to feel more like the Orange Bowl.

The Patriots focused on trying to replicate the speed of the Giants pass rush during practice.

Former Jets RB Curtis Martin hopes to go into the Hall of Fame with Bill Parcells.

Ravens C Matt Birk is still contemplating retirement.

Several Bengals players made the rounds at Radio Row in Indianapolis.

A breakdown of the Browns? defensive backs.

There will be another commercial appearance for former Steelers DE Mean Joe Greene on Sunday.

Texans G Mike Brisiel was pleased to make the USA Today ?All-Joe? team.

Former Colts WR Raymond Berry will help present the Lombardi Trophy on Sunday night.

Todd McShay of ESPN has the Jaguars taking North Carolina DE Quinton Coples in his latest mock draft.

Titans CB Jason McCourty is supporting his brother Devin?s attempt to win a Super Bowl this weekend.

The Broncos have hired Mike Sullivan as their new salary cap director.

Former Chiefs coach Dick Vermeil talks about the difficulty involved with building a coaching staff.

Los Angeles looks like less of a possibility for the Raiders after Roger Goodell?s press conference.

Chargers LB Shaun Phillips has been sued for allegedly throwing a champagne bottle that hit someone in the head.

Former Cowboys T Kurt Voellers has been sentenced to 30 months in jail for trafficking marijuana.

The Giants have used a video of a high school cross-country runner crawling across the finish line as motivation this season.

Boston College LB Luke Kuechly is a popular mock draft pick for the Eagles.

Joe Gibbs has been doing interviews and sharing memories of his Super Bowl trips with the Redskins.

Said Bears CB Charles Tillman of his trip to the Pro Bowl, ?It was an experience. I definitely had a blast. And I?m definitely looking forward to going to more. It was a great experience. Every player should experience it at least once, with their families. The whole family was there. That was one of those Griswold, family vacations. It was special.?

Lions QB Matthew Stafford doesn?t have his heart set on winning Comeback Player of the Year.

Can Packers TE Jermichael Finley have the kind of year we?ve seen from Rob Gronkowski?

Vikings P Chris Kluwe thinks the Patriots will win the Super Bowl.

The Falcons want an open-air stadium, but there may have to be a retractable roof to get it built.

LSU DT Michael Brockers is a popular mock draft choice for the Panthers.

The Saints hope T Willie Roaf ups the franchise?s representation in the Hall of Fame.

Looking ahead to the Buccaneers in free agency.

Cardinals president Michael Bidwill wouldn?t take the bait when asked about Peyton Manning.

Jim Thomas of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch thought commissioner Roger Goodell sent a ?rather stern message? about the future of the Rams in St. Louis.

San Francisco couldn?t match the stadium deal Santa Clara handed the 49ers.

Former Seahawks LB Isaiah Kacyvenski is a member of the board of the Sports Legacy Institute, which is working to raise awareness of the dangers of concussions.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/02/03/hines-ward-talking-to-steelers-about-return/related/

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Friday, February 3, 2012

UFC 143: Yahoo! Sports and Heavy present Fight Day Live

Fight Day Live is coming back at you this Saturday for another star studded show from the Mandalay Bay Resort in Las Vegas for UFC 143: Condit vs. Diaz. Hosts Dave Farra and Megan Olivi will prepare you for all the fighting action on Saturday and the expert panel of Matt Brown, John Morgan and Larry Pepe will break down the pay per view card and give their opinion on who will take home the win.

Also slated for Fight Day Live are two interview, live on set. The first is with the number one contender to the women's 135-pound belt, "Rowdy" Ronda Rousey. Rousey is a human soundbite, so you won't want to miss that one. And also on set is crowd favorite Clay "The Carpenter" Guida. ?Main event fighter Carlos Condit will also be featured in an exclusive one-on-one interview. Be sure and tune into Fight Day Live at 6 p.m. ET/ 3 p.m. PT.

Want to see Nick Diaz and Carlos Condit battle it out live at the Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas, Nevada?? Of course you do.? Well, your chance at being a part of all the UFC fighting action is only a couple of clicks away.

Log on to HeavyMMA's Facebook page.? From there, you must "like" the page and leave a comment about how much you'd love to go to the show. The folks at will Heavy conduct a random drawing and the lucky winner will receive two tickets to the big fight card on Feb. 4.

It's that easy!? So head over to HeavyMMA's Facebook page now and good luck.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/ufc-143-yahoo-sports-heavy-present-fight-day-034756112.html

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After IPO, Facebook will face new profit pressures

FILE - This Oct. 15, 2011 file photo, shows Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg smiling during a meeting in San Francisco. Will Facebook list its stock on the New York Stock Exchange or the Nasdaq? It comes down to "where Mark Zuckerberg wants to get his picture taken," the founder of one market research company says. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

FILE - This Oct. 15, 2011 file photo, shows Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg smiling during a meeting in San Francisco. Will Facebook list its stock on the New York Stock Exchange or the Nasdaq? It comes down to "where Mark Zuckerberg wants to get his picture taken," the founder of one market research company says. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

This Dec. 13, 2011 file photo, shows workers inside Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif.Facebook, the social network that changed "friend" from a noun to a verb, is expected to file as early as Wednesday to sell stock on the open market. Its debut is likely to be the most talked-about initial public offering since Google in 2004. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file)

FILE - This Dec. 13, 2011 file photo shows a sign at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. Facebook, the social network that changed "friend" from a noun to a verb, is expected to file as early as Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2012, to sell stock on the open market. Its debut is likely to be the most talked-about initial public offering since Google in 2004. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, file)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? For all the huge numbers in Facebook's IPO papers, a surprisingly small figure stands out: $4.39, the amount the site generated per user last year.

It's one of the company's major challenges because the total is paltry compared with competing Internet companies. Google makes more than $30 a year from each registered user. Even struggling Yahoo and AOL make $7 and $10, respectively.

Once Facebook goes public, Wall Street will surely demand more. That means the social network will almost certainly have to attract a lot more users or be more aggressive with its advertising, perhaps by mining personal data even more than it does now.

But can Facebook do all that without spoiling the user experience?

The company may have a tough time increasing the number of ads on a site that has become primarily a home for online conversations.

"It's a communications tool. Can you imagine what a turn-off it would be if we were talking on the phone and AT&T tried to play an ad in the middle of our conversation?" said University of Notre Dame finance professor Tim Loughran, who studies IPOs.

Facebook stock probably won't begin trading until at least May, but analysts already believe the company will try to sell shares at a price that will give it a market value of at least $100 billion ? more than Yahoo, AOL and Hewlett Packard Co. combined.

To justify a valuation like that, Facebook will need to maximize its revenue to get closer to Google, one of its biggest rivals. Google's revenue of nearly $38 billion last year translated into about $35 per registered user.

Facebook recorded $3.7 billion in revenue last year.

The question is whether it can bring in more money without alienating the 845 million users who have become accustomed to hanging out with friends and family on the social network without an onslaught of ads.

Part of that online environment has been by design. Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg wanted to get as many as people as possible to create profiles on the website before figuring out the best ways to profit from all the information about their interests and connections.

In theory, those insights should enable Facebook to target ads to people most likely to be interested in certain products or services. That should appeal to marketers, giving the site enough leverage to charge more for its ads than other sites. If the ads work, Facebook should easily be able to increase revenue per user to $10 to $12 annually, said Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter.

Before Google went public, it also faced questions about its ability to make money from selling ads next to search results, in emails and within videos. Evidently most users don't mind because Google's annual revenue is now about 25 times higher than in 2003.

Advertising isn't the only way Facebook can make money. It charges a commission for some of the sales of games and other services on its website. Although advertising accounted for 85 percent of Facebook's revenue last year, that was less than at Google, where ads accounted for 96 percent of revenue.

Most of Facebook's non-advertising revenue comes from commissions paid by Zynga Inc., the maker of such popular Web games as CityVille and Words With Friends. In its IPO papers, Facebook says it may try to increase its revenue by introducing fees for other e-commerce features on its website.

Facebook, which is based in Menlo Park, Calif., easily could offer sales of movies, music, even houses and cars. But believing it can expand into those markets requires a huge leap of faith, said Hudson Square Research analyst Daniel Ernst.

"It's like saying because Chipotle has been good at selling burritos in certain urban markets in the U.S., it should be able to make more money selling Chinese food in France," he said.

Facebook says roughly half its audience ? about 425 million people ? now gets access to its service on smartphones, tablet computers and other mobile devices. But the site acknowledges it hasn't figured out the best way to make money from mobile users.

The application-driven systems on mobile devices pose another threat because they could allow Zynga and other services to offer their own mobile apps to bypass Facebook and connect directly with users.

The rise of mobile devices also opens up an opportunity for Google to expand the audience of Plus, its social networking alternative to Facebook. Although it hasn't done so yet, Google could make Plus part of the Android operating system that runs 250 million smartphones and tablets.

Zuckerberg, Facebook's controlling shareholder as well as its leader, is promising to put users' interests ahead of the company's financial interests.

"Simply put: We don't build services to make money; we make money to build better services," Zuckerberg wrote in a letter included in Wednesday's IPO filing. "These days, I think more and more people want to use services from companies that believe in something beyond simply maximizing profits."

___

AP Technology Writer Barbara Ortutay in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-02-02-US-Facebook-IPO/id-b82415d7bae64371acab17df18cfaa27

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Romney stock trades clash with divestment pledge (AP)

WASHINGTON ? During his presidential campaign in 2007, Republican candidate Mitt Romney promised that a trust overseeing his financial portfolio would shed any investments that conflicted with GOP positions toward Iran, China, stem cell research and other issues. But Romney's family trusts kept some of those stocks and repeatedly bought new investments in similar holdings as recently as 2010, when they were sold in advance of his latest White House campaign, a detailed review of Romney's financial records by The Associated Press shows.

Recently disclosed 2010 tax returns for three family trust funds for Romney, his wife, Ann, and their adult children show scores of trades in such investments, worth more than $3 million when the holdings were all sold in 2010.

A Romney campaign spokeswoman, Andrea Saul, said the former Massachusetts governor has no control over the investments made by his blind trust, but the trustee has tried to manage the trades "in a manner consistent with Gov. Romney's publicly expressed positions."

The continual trading between 2006 and 2010 raises questions about why the investments continued for three years, even after Romney said the trust would sell off any conflicted holdings, during a period when Romney has sought to convince voters of his conservative Republican values. The trades also raise questions about whether any of the transactions were vetted for possible conflicts or purposes of political perception before they were made.

"Financially, these would seem to be completely legitimate investments," said Thomas B. Cooke, a professor of business law at Georgetown University and former president of the National Society of Tax Professionals. "But for someone running for president, there's also a smell test."

Romney's spokeswoman would not respond to questions about the timing or vetting of his investments in his blind trust. She said, however, that the lawyer running the trust occasionally makes adjustments in holdings with Romney's positions in mind.

Romney has kept many of his investments in a trust he describes as blind since he entered the Massachusetts governor's race in 2002. The trust is designed to eliminate conflicts of interest by preventing Romney from knowing about trades made on his behalf and from making specific financial decisions. A Boston attorney who runs the trust oversees Romney's far-flung holdings in stocks, mutual funds and securities.

Romney can set the general direction of his finances, Cooke and other tax experts said. Romney made that clear in August 2007, as he tried to quell a growing furor about his ownership of some stocks that clashed with Republican positions on Iran, China and other issues.

"The trustee of the blind trust has said publicly that he will endeavor to make my investments conform to my positions, and I have confidence that he will do that well," Romney said in 2007. The lawyer heading Romney's trust, R. Bradford Malt, had said earlier in 2007 that he was trying to eliminate conflicts between Romney's holdings and his policy positions.

In some cases, though, it took more than three years for Romney's trust to sell off stocks in companies whose operations appeared to be problematic for him. The AP review of Romney's capital gains financial statements indicate that he lost about $70,000 on the trades.

In 2007, Romney held between $100,000 and $250,000 worth of shares in Novo Nordisk, a Danish pharmaceutical company that engages in limited use of stem cells for research. But it was not until October 2010, on the eve of his second White House run, that Romney's trust sold off the last 27 shares of Novo Nordisk stock ? among 90 shares worth $7,700 that Romney's trust sold that year.

Romney supported stem cell research during his 2002 race for governor but changed his mind before the 2007 presidential race, saying the turnabout led him to oppose abortion. Now, like many social conservatives and his Republican campaign rivals, Romney opposes any use of human embryonic stem cells for research into diseases and other medical issues because the work could destroy viable human embryos.

Romney's trust also waited until 2010 to sell more than 900 shares ? worth nearly $50,000 ? that it held since 2006 in Teva Pharmaceutical, an Israeli company that engages in stem cell research. Teva also manufactures "Plan B One-Step," an emergency contraceptive known as the "morning after pill," which is opposed by anti-abortion groups.

In 2005, as Massachusetts governor, Romney vetoed an attempt by the state legislature to require hospitals to provide morning-after pills to rape victims and make them available to women and teenaged girls without a prescription. Romney said at the time he opposed the contraceptive's distribution because the pill would not only prevent conception but "would also terminate life after conception." His veto was overruled.

The Obama administration recently drew criticism from pro-abortion rights advocates by allowing the Teva contraceptive to be sold over the counter, but not to girls younger than age 17, who would still require a prescription.

As late as 2009, the Romney trusts bought 600 new shares in Fresenius Medical Care, a German firm that also did stem cell work. The trust sold the Fresenius holdings, worth more than $30,000, in 2010.

The head of the Susan B. Anthony List, a political committee that supports anti-abortion candidates, said she was concerned about Romney's investments in firms whose work is opposed by social conservatives.

"Embryonic stem cell research is the issue that was the catalyst for the governor's pro-life conversion," said Marjorie Dannenfelser, the committee's president. "He should explain what appears to be a lack of follow-through in coming to terms with an issue about which he expresses great passion."

Romney's tax returns, which he released under pressure on Jan. 24, also described numerous recent stock trades in companies tied to the Chinese government or to its censorship and crackdown on free speech. As recently as October 2009, Romney's trusts were buying stock in companies like China Northshore Oil and China Merchants Holdings. More than 130 shares of the oil company were sold in late January 2010 for $19,000, along with 630 shares of China Merchants worth $21,000. The Chinese government has long incurred criticism for its tight control of the country's media and internet and for its suppression of dissent.

Shares of other Chinese assets that Romney's trust bought and sold in 2010 included the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Life Insurance and New Oriental Education, a company sued in 2003 by a U.S. firm for copyright infringement.

The director of an international organization advocating human rights in China said Romney's personal investments were as important as his political statements in trying to gauge the depth of his support for change inside China.

A presidential candidate "is accountable to the public for his full record, including financial investments and the potential human rights impact of the companies he has invested in," said Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China.

Some of the largest stock trades made by the Romney trust involved companies that have operated in Iran. Romney has urged toughened sanctions and military steps against Iran and has called for strategic divestment of firms that do business there. In 2007, his trustee said he had sold off Romney investments in French and Italian energy companies with business ties to Iran.

But between mid-2009 and mid-2010, the Romney trusts made large investments in securities from BNP Paribas, a French bank with long-standing operations in Iran. The bank halted new business in Iran in 2007 but is still trying to terminate outstanding loans there. In all, Romney's family trusts bought more than 2.6 million shares, which were all sold in late 2010 for about $2.5 million.

Romney's trust for his grown children also bought and sold shares in China North Oil, recently named by the Congressional Research Service as a likely violator of the Iran Sanctions Act, and in Intesa Sanpaolo, an Italian bank that has been under investigation by U.S. authorities for handling of Iranian funds. There were also trades in stock of Gazprom, Schlumberger, Komatsu and Unilever ? all firms that have had business in or with Iran.

Many of those companies are included among an extensive list compiled by United Against Nuclear Iran, a bipartisan group urging pressure on firms with business in Iran. A spokesman for the group, Nathan Carleton, declined to comment on Romney's holdings. But Carleton noted that the group's list ? it named several of the firms the Romney trusts bought stock in ? "is available for anyone to investigate."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120202/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney_s_investments

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Russia blames Mars probe failure on space radiation

MOSCOW | Tue Jan 31, 2012 2:09pm EST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia blamed radiation on Tuesday for a computer glitch that doomed its Mars moon mission, but space industry experts cast doubt on the findings of an investigation into the crash of what was to be Moscow's first deep space mission in two decades.

The Phobos-Grunt spacecraft was stranded in Earth orbit after launch in November and crashed into the Pacific Ocean this month, one of five recent botched Russian launches.

Space agency chief Vladimir Popovkin also said Moscow would postpone the next U.S.-Russian manned mission to the International Space Station by one month from March over technical problems during testing of the Soyuz spacecraft.

The delay, which officials said was due to glitches with the Soyuz descent capsule, is likely to fuel concerns over relying solely on Russia to take astronauts into orbit.

"The most likely reason, in the opinion of the commission, was the local impact of heavily charged space particles that led to a failure in the memory of the main onboard computer in the second stage of flight," Popovkin told Russian news agencies in Voronezh, a town 450 km (280 miles) south of Moscow.

A burst of space radiation caused the onboard computers to reboot and go into standby mode, he said.

Popovkin said foreign-made counterfeit or defective microchips were partly to blame for the failure of the $165-million spacecraft, designed to retrieve soil samples from the Martian moon Phobos.

The budget for Russia's space program, he said, would be 150-200 billion roubles ($5-6.6 billion) a year until 2030.

EXPERTS CAST DOUBT

Popovkin had earlier hinted that foreign sabotage might be behind the failure, in an apparent attempt to deflect blame.

Experts said Moscow was blaming external factors for the loss of its ambitious Mars mission to distract from chronic failings with its once-pioneering industry.

"You can fantasize about everything. This is one of a number of possible reasons but one that is convenient for many people," Alexander Zakharov, the mission's lead scientist, told Reuters.

"Even if this was the true reason, which we can't completely rule out because it does happen, then there is some kind of problem with the flight system or the programming, which were not designed to guard against this (space radiation)."

State RIA news agency cited an industry source as saying it was "simply absurd" that Phobos-Grunt had not been made to withstand cosmic rays on its two-year interplanetary mission.

"They did not make a vacuum cleaner but a spacecraft that is intended to fly in the aggressive environment of outer space. They couldn't have failed to take this into account," the source said.

Another space industry source said potentially damaging bursts of radiation were highly unlikely in low-Earth orbit, where hundreds of satellites circle within the protective bubble of the planet's magnetic field.

"This usually happens with interplanetary satellites around Mars or Venus, in other words, in deep space," the source told RIA. "This phenomenon occurs every one or two years on average, but it is very unlikely to see it in low-Earth orbit."

Earlier Tuesday, the head of Russia's manned space program, Alexei Krasnov, said flaws with the hermetic sealing on the Soyuz TMA-04M re-entry were found during testing.

The mission, which was due to launch on March 30, will be delayed to allow time for a new capsule to be readied, likely delaying other missions as well.

(Reporting By Alissa de Carbonnel; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/--YTe-ca_Ws/us-russia-spacecraft-idUSTRE80U1YC20120131

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Gibson Les Paul Studio 60s Tribute Electric Guitar ? Social ...

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Source: http://www.ilovejamming.com/gibson-les-paul-studio-60s-tribute-electric-guitar-social-shopping-training-for-social-media-online-marketers-trends-2011/

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You Can Overcome Investing Fears | drax29.info

Negative headlines, 500-point-plus swings in the Dow Jones Industrial Average and economic uncertainty continue to fuel investors? fears. While some of those fears may be justified, financial advisers say you can harm your financial future if you let your fear keep you on the investing sidelines.

[25PBc]

Bob Daly

Here are five big fears that haunt investors and what financial advisers say you can do to overcome them:

1. Indexes Zeroing Out

Financial adviser Kurt Rozman recently met with a client who was convinced that the Standard & Poor?s 500-stock index was going to end up at ?zero by year-end? and that he would ?go broke? if he didn?t sell out of the market immediately.

?He envisioned an extremely unrealistic scenario,? says the Brookfield, Wis.-based adviser.

Mr. Rozman explained to the client that for the S&P 500 to go to zero, all of the 500 largest companies in America would need to ?go bust? at the exact same time and that was very unlikely to happen.

When a client is convinced of a ?doomsday? scenario, Brad Klontz, a financial psychologist in Kapaa, Hawaii, encourages him or her to take a few deep breaths and repeat silently a phrase such as ?relax.? The client can then evaluate the accuracy of his or her thinking and look for evidence to support or refute that position. ?Just because a thought comes into your mind, it doesn?t mean it?s true,? Mr. Klontz says.

He also encourages clients to put some time between their initial impulse to react and the actions they wish to take so emotions play less of a role in their investment decisions.

2. Short-Term Volatility

After losing $400 in three months, the 24-year-old son of one of Ben Sullivan?s clients decided he wanted to ?bail out on stocks.? Some clients? young-adult children are hesitant to invest in their company?s 401(k) because their co-workers? fear of the market?s volatility has affected their perspective, says the certified financial planner based in Scarsdale, N.Y.

While 500-plus point swings can be difficult to stomach, swearing off stocks or not investing in a 401(k) can be a big mistake, says Mr. Sullivan.

?When you have a 20- to 40-year time horizon,? he says, ?waiting to invest is likely riskier than losing a small amount in the short term.?

Mr. Sullivan says he encouraged the 24-year-old to hold on to his investment strategy and recognize that when he retires, the $400 loss will be ?long forgotten.?

3. Investing in the Unfamiliar

In some cases, the fear of investing in the unfamiliar can be useful since there are some financial products that are too complex to understand and that investors may be better off avoiding, says Jared Kizer, a St. Louis-based investment adviser.

However, when taken to the extreme, investors may lack the diversification needed to meet their long-term retirement goals, he says.

Choosing investments just because they?re familiar can also create unintended risk, Mr. Kizer adds.

For a client who invested nearly all of his life savings in his employer?s stock, Mr. Kizer demonstrated how he would have a better chance of meeting his retirement goals if he invested in a variety of assets. Mr. Kizer also shared stories of investors who had lost their retirement savings when their employers went bankrupt.

4. Missing the Market

James Miller continues to field calls from some clients asking if they should ?get out of the market now and get back in when things look safer.?

The Chapel Hill, N.C.-based certified financial planner tells them that timing the market isn?t the answer. He reminds them that when things look ?safer,? the market will likely be at a much higher level and the clients will have lost out on a significant amount of the upside by that point.

5. Not Having Enough Money to Invest

When clients have too much debt and too little cash flow, they often feel that they don?t have enough money to invest, says Constance Stone, a Chagrin Falls, Ohio-based certified financial planner.

?It?s often because the client?s spending is irrational,? she says.

Ms. Stone recently helped a couple in their early 30s with $132,000 in credit-card and school-loan debt scrutinize their monthly spending and find ways to cut back. In the end, the couple realized that by cutting down on expenses, such as meals out, they?d have money to save toward retirement.

?You can start small,? she says.

Write to Veronica Dagher at veronica.dagher@dowjones.com

Source: http://drax29.info/you-can-overcome-investing-fears

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