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Jul 29

T-Shirts | Mouse Pads | Promotional Hats | Express Line | Neck Coolers

Offers a wide variety of promotional items, including apparel, tote bags and cd cases.
Jul 29

US, Iraqi forces launch new operation in Diyala
(AP)

Shiite pilgrims are searched by Iraqi army soldiers as they approach the shrine of Imam Moussa al-Kadhim in Baghdad's Kazimiyah neighborhood, Iraq, Monday, July 28, 2008. Three female suicide bombers blew their explosive vests in the middle of pilgrims in Baghdad, moments after a roadside bomb attack, killing at least 32 people and wounding 102, Iraqi officials said. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)AP - U.S. and Iraqi forces launched a new operation Tuesday aimed at clearing al-Qaida in Iraq from the volatile Diyala province, considered the last major insurgent safe haven near the capital.


S&P: Home prices drop by record 15.8 pct. in May
(AP)

In this May 7, 2008 file photo, a home is advertised for sale in Stockton, Calif. A closely watched housing index shows home prices fell by the steepest rate ever in May, as the housing slump continued to deepen nationwide. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, file)AP - Home prices tumbled by the steepest rate ever in May, according to a closely watched housing index released Tuesday, as the housing slump deepened nationwide.


McCain backs off his no-new-tax pledge
(AP)

Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain speaks at a campaign picnic outside the Maine Military Museum in South Portland, Maine July 21, 2008. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)AP - Republican presidential candidate John McCain’s signal that he may be open to a higher payroll tax for Social Security, despite previous vows not to raise taxes of any kind, is drawing sharp rebukes from conservatives.


Wildfire threatens homes and vacations in Yosemite
(AP)

Firefighters watch as flames rise from the bed of the Merced River along Highway 140, near Yosemite National Park in Midpines, California July 28, 2008. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters)AP - Visitors to Yosemite National Park weighed whether to cut their vacations short Tuesday as a destructive wildfire raging miles from the famed wilderness threatened thousands of homes and left evacuees stranded.


Los Angeles wants to take bite out of fast food
(AP)

Signs for fast foot restaurants are seen on a street in Los Angeles on Monday, July 28, 2008. In South Los Angeles, fast food is also the easiest cuisine to find, and that's a problem for elected officials who see it as an unhealthy source of calories and cholesterol. The City Council is poised to vote Tuesday on a moratorium on new fast-food restaurants in a swath of the city where a proliferation of such eateries goes hand in hand with more fat adults and chunky children than other areas of Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)AP - In the impoverished neighborhood of South Los Angeles, fast food is the easiest cuisine to find and that’s a problem for elected officials who see it as an unhealthy source of calories and cholesterol.


Bush: Former Army cook’s crimes warrant execution
(AP)

This April 1988 picture shows Ronald A. Gray in handcuffs and chains, escorted by military police leaving a Fort Bragg, N.C. courtroom. President Bush on Monday, July 28, 2008 approved the execution of the Army private, the first time in over a half-century that a president has affirmed a death sentence for a member of the U.S. military. Gray was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg. (AP Photo/The Fayetteville Observer, Marcus Castro)AP - President Bush could have commuted the death sentence of Ronald A. Gray, a former Army cook convicted of multiple rapes and murders.


XM Satellite and Sirius complete merger
(AP)

A woman walks past the waiting area of the XM Satellite Radio building after the U.S. Justice Department approved that Sirius Satellite Radio's $4.59 billion purchase of rival XM Satellite Radio would be given antitrust clearance in Washington, March 25, 2008. XM Satellite Radio Holdings and Sirius Satellite Radio said they could pay up to $19 million to settle past compliance issues with federal regulators, a move that helps clear the way for U.S. Federal Communications Commission approval of their merger. (Larry Downing/Reuters)AP - XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio said Tuesday they have completed their long-pending merger.


Amy Winehouse released from London hospital
(AP)

In this file photo dated June 27, 2008, British singer Amy Winehouse performs at the 46664 charity concert in honour of Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday in London. A spokesman for Winehouse said late Monday, July 28, 2008 the she has been admitted to a London hospital. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, File)AP - Amy Winehouse was released from a London hospital Tuesday after an overnight stay to treat what her spokesman said was an adverse reaction to medication.


Thieves break into aquatics shop, steal shark
(AP)

AP - British police were searching for a shark stolen from an aquatics shop over the weekend in southern England.

NY judge sentences disgraced NBA ref to 15 months
(AP)

Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy arrives at Brooklyn federal court for his sentencing, Tuesday, July 29, 2008, in New York. Donaghy pleaded guilty in August 2007 to federal charges that he took payoffs from a professional gambler for inside tips on games. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)AP - Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy was sentenced to 15 months in prison Tuesday for setting off a gambling scandal that tarnished the reputation of the league and raised questions about the integrity of its officiating.


Jul 19

Custom Promotional Products | Items | Gifts | Advertising

4 Promo - Promotional Products, Promotion Items, Advertising Gifts, and Advertising Specialties, Including Hats, Mouse Pads, Custom T Shirts, Pens,
Jul 17
Neck Coolers
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T-Shirts | Mouse Pads | Promotional Hats | Express Line | Neck Coolers

A promotional item is an article given away free of charge to the populace in an effort to encourage  business or increase interest in, or sales of, a product or service. Often given out at trade shows, used in direct mail as a marketing campaigns. Promotional items are also used in politics to promote candidates and different causes.  Promotional products are also used by organizations, and schools often as a part of fund raising and awareness campaigns. A popular example was the livestrong wristband, used to promote cancer awareness and raise funds to support cancer survivorship programs and research. Examples of promotional items include custom t-shirts, promotional hats, bumper stickers, and promotional pens. Everyone uses promotional pens. Think about it someone is always asking for your “John Hancock” on some document. That makes  pens a great way to seal the deal. With every loan doc or contract you have signed give your customer a nice quality promotional pen with your company name on the barrel.

Jul 17

Bush set to survey Northern California wildfires
(AP)

President Bush speaks as county music entertainer Kenny Chesney, second from left, and a members of his band watch in the Rose Garden of the White House, Wednesday, July 16, 2008, in Washington after President Bush hosted a social dinner in honor of Major League Baseball. (AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)AP - The White House said President Bush will visit Northern California on Thursday to get a first-hand look at the wildfires that have ravaged hundreds of square miles and strained the state’s firefighting resources.


Midwest’s flood-prone communities consider buyouts
(AP)

This June 14, 2008 file photo shows floodwaters  in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Weeks after the latest massive floods in the Midwest, voluntary buyouts are again being considered in at least five states  Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois.   Officials in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, have been telling residents it could be a year or more before they know how much will be available for buyouts. Officials have said that half of the estimated 4,000 homes that were damaged will have to be demolished. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)AP - Debbie Halcomb unpacked boxes as she moved back into her flood-damaged home, but worried that her damp carpet harbors mold. She enjoys the normally tranquil setting of Winfield, a community about three miles from the Mississippi River. But she’s had enough. She’s hoping for a government buyout so she can move to higher ground.


Hippie town’s homeless attack portends trend
(AP)

Bill Boman, left, greets Monika Bahnsen, right, outside of Smiley's Schooner Saloon in Bolinas, Calif., Wednesday, July 9, 2008. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)AP - Ricky Green wandered into this town some months ago, a stranger just a bit stranger than most. He had shed his middle-class respectability a job as a graphic artist in the ‘burbs strapped a guitar over his shoulder and landed here on what he told people was “a spiritual journey.”


DC residents can start applying for gun permits
(AP)

District of Columbia Chief of Police Cathy Lanier, left, listens as D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty announces new firearms regulations in the wake of the Supreme Court's overturning of the city's hangun ban in Washington on Monday July 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)AP - Police in the District of Columbia are set to begin registering residents for handguns Thursday now that the district’s 32-year-old ban has been lifted.


Jul 16

Release denied for dying Manson follower
(AP)

Shariss Atkins, the niece of Charles Manson follower Susan Atkins, wipes her eyes after asking state parole officials to consider compassionate release for her aunt, at a hearing in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday, July 15, 2008.  Atkins, who is serving a life sentence for her 1969 conviction of the cult murders of actress Sharon Tate and several others, is dying of brain cancer. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)AP - A follower of Charles Manson who stabbed pregnant actress Sharon Tate to death nearly 40 years ago but is dying of brain cancer in a California prison was denied compassionate release Tuesday.


Life for killer of 11 in LA commuter rail disaster
(AP)

AP - A man who murdered 11 people by causing a commuter rail disaster was spared the death penalty Tuesday by jurors who wept while listening to victims’ relatives but decided he should get life in prison without parole.

Woman gets nearly 11 years for NY adoption fraud
(AP)

This 2007 file photo provided by the St. Lucie County, Fla., Sheriff's Department shows Judith Leekin, 62, of Port St. Lucie, Fla., who bilked a child welfare agency out of more than $1 million in adoption subsidies while allegedly abusing 11 disabled children. Leekin was sentenced in New York Tuesday, July 15, 2008 to nearly 11 years in prison. She also faces abuse charges in Florida and could be sentenced to as much as 120 years in prison if convicted. (AP Photo/St. Lucie County Sheriff's Dept., File)AP - A woman who lied to adopt 11 disabled children whom authorities say she abused while she raked in more than $1 million in subsidies was sentenced Tuesday to nearly 11 years in prison.


US moves to revoke citizenship of suspected Nazi
(AP)

AP - The Justice Department asked a federal court Tuesday to revoke the citizenship of an 86-year-old Seattle-area man, saying he served in a Nazi unit that slaughtered 17,000 Serbian civilians during World War II.

Jul 14

Cell phone companies scramble to halt trafficking
(AP)

In this undated surveillance photo provided by TracFone Wireless, a man is seen checking cheap cell phones. You can buy these phones for less than $15, loaded with a set amount of minutes. And when the time is used, you can add more time to the phone. Traffickers have figured out they can make big profits by purchasing thousands of these phones and tweaking the software, so that the phones can be used on any network, thus costing the phone companies tens of millions of dollars. (AP Photo/TracFone Wireless)AP - For less than $15, you can buy a cell phone loaded with minutes. You can buy more as you go whenever those minutes run out. Best of all, you aren’t locked into a long-term contract.


Game characters get smarter and less predictable
(AP)

AP - In the upcoming video game “Star Wars: The Force Unleashed,” the evil Stormtroopers are smart enough to keep players guessing.

Tensions escalating in battle for Yahoo’s board
(AP)

In this May 4, 2007 file photo, a Times Square news ticker flashes a headline about Microsoft above a billboard for Yahoo in New York. Yahoo Inc. late Saturday rejected Microsoft's latest attempt to buy its online search operations in a 'take or leave it' proposal that Yahoo said would have dismantled its Internet franchise. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)AP - After more than five months of sparring, the battle for control of Yahoo Inc. has turned into a bare-knuckles brawl with a whiff of desperation hanging over all the key combatants.


Microsoft cuts Xbox price by $50, plans 60GB model
(AP)

AP - Microsoft Corp. is trimming the price of its Xbox 360 video game console to make way for a new model with a bigger hard drive.

Microsoft cuts price of Xbox 360
(CNET)

CNET - Microsoft on Sunday cut the price of its best-selling Xbox 360 Pro model game console with a 20GB hard drive from $349 to $299.

‘World’s oldest blogger’ dies in Australia
(AFP)

File photo shows a woman updating her blog. An Australian woman described as the world's oldest Internet blogger has died at the age of 108 after posting a final message about singing AFP - An Australian woman described as the world’s oldest Internet blogger has died at the age of 108 after posting a final message about singing “a happy song” in her nursing home.


Jul 12

2nd near collision occurs at JFK airport in week
(AP)

A passenger aircraft waits on a taxiway as another takes off from a farther runway at Newark Liberty International Airport in this June 27, 2008 file photo in Newark, N.J. Two airborne planes  one landing and the other taking off  came within a half-mile of colliding at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport on Friday in the second such incident at the airport in a week, the Federal Aviation Administration said. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, file)AP - Two airborne planes one landing and the other taking off came within a half-mile of colliding at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Friday in the second such incident at the airport in a week, the Federal Aviation Administration said.


Overseas crews coming to battle Calif. wildfires
(AP)

Firefighter Nicole Scott, of the Novato Fire District, takes a break while working on the Butte Lightening Complex fire near Jarbo Gap, Calif., Friday, July 11, 2008.  The fire has destroyed at least 50 homes and consumed over 48,000 acres.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)AP - As hundreds of blazes continue to char California, additional National Guard troops and overseas crews are being called in to assist exhausted firefighters, and President Bush has scheduled a visit to the state.


Tanker explosion shuts down Mass. highway
(AP)

AP - A tanker truck hauling gasoline has rolled over and exploded on a highway in Needham, Mass., setting off a fire visible 10 miles away in Boston.

FBI: Agents foil bank robbery, rescue hostage
(AP)

AP - FBI agents say a suburban Chicago bank employee just may have saved her fiance’s life after he was abducted, bound, shot in the leg and hit in the feet with a wrench by ransom-seeking kidnappers.

Pioneering heart doctor Michael DeBakey dead at 99
(AP)

In this Oct. 6, 1977 file photo Dr. Michael DeBakey, 69, Houston famed heart surgeon, poses with his wife Katrin, 34, for the first public photograph of their two month old daughter Olga Katrina, born on July, 29, 1977 in Houston. DeBakey, the world-famous cardiovascular surgeon who pioneered such now-common procedures as bypass surgery and invented a host of devices to help heart patients, died Friday night July 11, 2008 at The Methodist Hospital in Houston, officials announced. He was 99. (AP Photo, FILE)AP - Dr. Michael DeBakey, the world-famous cardiovascular surgeon who pioneered such now-common procedures as bypass surgery and invented a host of devices to help heart patients, has died. He was 99.


US judge blocks gas drilling in Michigan forest
(AP)

AP - A federal judge has overturned a decision by the U.S. Forest Service to allow oil and gas drilling near a forest and a river in Michigan’s northern Lower Peninsula.

Calif. aquafarmers cash in on demand for abalone
(AP)

Matt Steinke, a manager at the Carlsbad Aquafarm, points out characteristics of green-red abalone hybrids cultured at Carlsbad Aquafarms in Carlsbad, Calif. Tuesday, July 1, 2008. Abalone have gone missing from the country's dinner plates since demand for the shellfish's delicate meaty flesh pushed it to the brink of extinction. Now the native of the California coast is staging a culinary comeback, as aquafarms in the state ramp up production of the delicacy. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)AP - Carlsbad Aquafarm is growing a multimillion-dollar investment in abalone in a row of tanks alongside a tidal lagoon just outside San Diego.


Software problems bug Apple’s launch of new iPhone
(AP)

An Apple Store employee rings up orders for the new iPhone in New York, Friday July 11, 2008. Apple Inc.'s new iPhone went on sale Friday to eager buyers worldwide, but there were problems getting the phones to work. (AP Photo/Ed Ou)AP - The launch of Apple Inc.’s much-anticipated new iPhone turned into an information-technology meltdown on Friday, as customers were unable to get their phones working.


Fire engulfs commercial boatyard on Maine coast
(AP)

Firefighters spray water on the smoldering remains of Washburn & Doughty Associates boatyard Friday, July 11, 2008  in East Boothbay, Maine. The 50,000-square-foot building at Washburn & Doughty Associates was rocked by a series of explosions as flames ripped through the facility. (AP Photo/Joel Page)AP - A spectacular fire Friday destroyed a boatyard that turned out commercial fishing boats, tugs, barges and ferries on the Maine coast.


Report: 2nd oldest US wildlife refuge in jeopardy
(AP)

AP - The nation’s second oldest national wildlife refuge, a chain of barrier islands southeast of New Orleans, is in danger of being lost unless the islands are restored, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Friday.

Hospital error blamed for more infant overdoses
(AP)

Hector and Maggie Chapa, grandparents to twins Keith and Kaylynn Garcia who died this week at a  Corpus Christi, Texas hospital, talk about their grandchildren Friday, July 11, 2008 at their attorney's office in Corpus Christi. The hospital has acknowledged that an error in its pharmacy caused the overdose of 14 infants in the hospital. (AP Photo/Caller-Times, Todd Yates)AP - The case of 14 babies who received accidental overdoses while in intensive care has raised new questions about how a common blood-thinning medication could be given to infants repeatedly in the wrong dosage.


Jul 12

North Korean nuclear talks lead to agreement
(AP)

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, second from left, talks to Japanese envoy Akitaka Saikiin, left, Russian envoy Alexei Borodavkin, second from right and South Korean envoy Kim Sook, right, as they wait for North Korean envoy Kim Kye Gwan, in  Beijing, Saturday, July 12, 2008. Six-nation talks on disarming North Korea's nuclear program moved closer Saturday to an agreement on ways to verify the communist nation's declaration of its nuclear materials. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, Pool)AP - Negotiators from six nations agreed Saturday on steps to verify North Korea’s nuclear disarmament, opening the final phase in tortuous efforts to rid the North of nuclear weapons.


NKorea blames SKorea for tourist death
(AP)

Yoon Man-joon, president of Hyundai Asan which operates a resort as a tourist enclave inside the communist North Korea, speaks to reporters before leaving for Diamond Mountain in North Korea at the headquarters of Hyundai Asan in Seoul, Saturday, July 12, 2008. A North Korean soldier fatally shot a South Korean tourist Friday at the mountain resort in the communist nation, prompting the South to suspend the high-profile tourism program just as its new president sought to rekindle strained ties between the divided countries. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)AP - North Korea said South Korea was to blame for the shooting death of a South Korean tourist in the communist nation, demanding an apology Saturday and saying it would ban visits to a mountain resort where Seoul has already suspended tours since the killing.


Iraqi security better; governance falling short
(AP)

Maj. Gen. Jeffery Hammond, the top commander of U.S. forces in the Baghdad area, right, says goodbye to Sheik Ayad al-Jabouri at Combat Outpost Radwaniyah, southwest of Baghdad, Friday, July 11, 2008.   In the rural outskirts of Baghdad, where the war seems distant in Iraq's new period of relative calm, a prominent Sunni tribal chief makes no bones about what is lacking in the drive to turn security improvements into lasting economic and political change.  'Up to now we have seen nothing from the government,' al-Jaborui said with more than a hint of disdain for the Shiite-dominated leadership in the capital.   (AP Photo/Robert Burns)AP - In the rural outskirts of Baghdad, where the war seems distant in Iraq’s new period of relative calm, a prominent Sunni tribal chief makes no bones about what is lacking in the drive to turn security improvements into lasting economic and political change.


As violence recedes in Iraq, rebuilding gets tough
(AP)

U.S. Army Capt. Mike Forbes, left, takes a photo at the site of a car bomb blast in west Baghdad's upscale Mansour neighborhood, Iraq, Thursday, July 10, 2008. Violence in Iraq is at its lowest level in four years, but ask Capt. Mike Forbes, and he will tell you his job as a troop commander in Baghdad has gotten harder, not easier. (AP Photo/Sebastian Abbot)AP - Violence in Iraq is at its lowest level in four years, but ask Capt. Mike Forbes, and he will tell you his job as a troop commander in Baghdad has gotten harder, not easier.


Russia, China veto UN sanctions on Zimbabwe regime
(AP)

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe addresses his supporters at Harare airport on July 4, 2008, after flying home from an African Union summit. China and Russia on Friday blocked a US draft resolution in the UN Security Council that would have slapped sanctions on Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe over his disputed re-election.(AFP/Alexander Joe)AP - Russia and China vetoed U.S.-proposed sanctions on Zimbabwe’s leaders Friday, the global community’s latest attempt to take action against an authoritarian regime widely criticized for a violent and one-sided presidential election.


5 injured in packed bull run at Spanish festival
(AP)

Revelers are chased by Dolores Aguirre's ranch fighting bulls on the six day of the running of the bulls during the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, northern Spain, Saturday, July 12, 2008. The fiestas 'Los San Fermines' held since 1591, attracts tens of thousands of foreign visitors each year for nine days of revelry, morning bull-runs and afternoon bullfights. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)AP - A packed running of the bulls left one daredevil gored and four others injured Saturday at Pamplona’s annual San Fermin festival, officials said.


AP: ‘Lob bombs’ biggest worry for US in Baghdad
(AP)

Military vehicles are seen at a U.S.-Iraqi military outpost in the Sadr City section of Baghdad, Friday, July 11, 2008, that was struck April 28 by an improved rocket-assisted mortar, a weapon that Maj. Gen. Jeffery Hammond told The Associated Press on Friday is the greatest threat facing American troops in Iraq now. (AP Photo/Robert Burns)AP - U.S. forces may be close to unlocking the mystery of who is behind a deadly innovation in Iraqi insurgents’ weapons, a “lob bomb” now being used in Baghdad to target U.S. and Iraqi combat outposts, a senior American general said Friday in an Associated Press interview.


Jul 11

Bush signs new rules on government wiretapping
(AP)

President Bush, left, shakes hand with Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Sen. Jay Rockerfeller, D-W.Va, right, after signing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, (FISA), Thursday, July 10, 2008, in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington. House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio is at center. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)AP - President Bush signed a bill Thursday that overhauls rules about government eavesdropping and grants immunity to telecommunications companies that helped the U.S. spy on Americans in suspected terrorism cases.


Hollywood producers say SAG rejects contract offer
(AP)

Screen Actors Guild (SAG) members and supporters hold a solidarity rally regarding contract negotiations outside the SAG National Headquarters, on June 9, in Los Angeles, California. US production studios warned Monday that Hollywood's entertainment industry AP - The Screen Actors Guild rejected the latest contract offer from Hollywood studios on Thursday but claimed it was willing to negotiate and presented a counterproposal.


Calif. National Guard joins firefighting effort
(AP)

California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection Capt. Walt Williams, right, calls for volunteers as he trains members of the California National Guard during fire training, Wednesday, July 9, 2008, in Albion, Calif. California's wildfire season has grown so severe so swiftly that National Guard troops have been deployed to fight the flames on the ground for the first time in 30 years. Many of them are arriving at the fire line just after returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)AP - Sweat rolled down Lisa Mirander’s forehead as she hacked a tangle of saplings and brush down to bare dirt to prevent a wildfire from spreading. It was a tough job, but no harder than the 13 months she served in Afghanistan.


Bodies of 2 missing US soldiers are found in Iraq
(AP)

In this undated file photo released by the U.S. Army, Spc. Alex R. Jimenez is seen. The father of Jimenez of Lawrence said his son's body has been found in Iraq. Andy Jimenez said uniformed military officials came to his home Thursday to tell him the body of his son had been discovered. Sgt. Jimenez, 25, was one of three members of the 2nd Brigade of the 10th Mountain Division kidnapped by terrorists during an ambush in May 2007. (AP Photo/U.S. Army, File)AP - The bodies of two U.S. soldiers missing in Iraq for more than a year have been found, their families said Thursday night. The military would not immediately confirm the report.


McCain disagrees with adviser’s ‘whiners’ remark
(AP)

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., pauses to listen to audience questions during a campaign stop at the Bayloff Stamped Products facility in Belleville, Mich., Thursday, July 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)AP - Republican John McCain distanced himself from an economic adviser who dubbed the United States “a nation of whiners” in a “mental recession” as Democrat Barack Obama turned the remarks against his rival.


Obama seeks info on Dodd in vice president search
(AP)

Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., greets supporters after speaking at a town hall-style meeting in Fairfax, Va., Thursday, July 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)AP - Barack Obama’s presidential campaign has requested information from Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd as part of its search for a possible vice presidential candidate.


Toyota will start making hybrid Prius in US
(AP)

In this Nov. 17, 2006 file photo. Toyota Motor Corporation president Katsuaki Watanabe climbs into a 2007 Toyota Tundra during a Toyota Line-off Celebration at the plant in San Antonio. A Toyota official speaking Thursday, July 10, 2008, to The Associated Press says the company plans to shut down a San Antonio plant that makes the Toyota Tundra pickup for three months to reduce inventory and stop making pickups in Princeton, Ind. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)AP - Toyota Motor Corp., the seemingly unstoppable juggernaut that saw its U.S. sales double in the last decade, has come back down to earth. Stung by rare double-digit sales declines and burdened by a growing inventory of slow-selling pickups, Toyota said Thursday it will start producing the Prius hybrid in the U.S. and will shut down truck and SUV production to meet changing consumer demands.


AP IMPACT: An American life worth less today
(AP)

AP - It’s not just the American dollar that’s losing value. A government agency has decided that an American life isn’t worth what it used to be.

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