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llc - What does it mean to be registered as a professional company ...

This is dependent on the jurisdiction, you cannot ask such a question without telling what country/State/Province you're at.

In the USA, in many States licensed professionals providing personal services (like lawyers, CPA's, doctors, architects, civil engineers, cosmetologists, etc) are barred from working under LLC. In some States they must operate either as sole proprietors/partnerships or as corporations (for example, California), other States provide specific legal structures like PLLC and/or PC (professional corporation) which these professionals must use. Generally this is done to disallow the "limited" liability protection for personal services.

You should consult a legal professional whether or not you should use LLC or PLLC. If you're not a State-licensed professional, usually you wouldn't be limited in using LLC (for example, EA, licensed by the Federal Government, can operate under LLC in California). This depends on the specific State you're in.

Source: http://answers.onstartups.com/questions/44919/what-does-it-mean-to-be-registered-as-a-professional-company

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Samuel Adams teams up with TCHO Chocolate to create a holiday ...

SAMUEL ADAMS CHOCOLATE BOX

Supporter Press Release:

(Boston, MA) ? Most people wouldn?t pair beer and chocolate, but this holiday season, that?s about to change.? Samuel Adams and?San Francisco-based craft chocolate maker TCHO have teamed up to introduce the?Samuel Adams?Beer Lover?s Chocolate Box.? The Brewers at Samuel Adams worked closely with TCHO?s Chief Chocolate Maker Brad Kintzer to design the gift box so that each premium chocolate pairs with a Samuel Adams brew from the?Samuel Adams?Winter Classics Variety Pack. Just in time for holiday festivities and gifting, this assortment of specialty chocolates will prove to any foodie that beer and chocolate are the perfect combination.

Chocolate lovers and craft beer connoisseurs alike will enjoy the surprising flavor combinations. The malty sweetness and rich flavors of craft beer enhance, and are enriched by, the flavors of rich premium chocolate. The carbonation of the beer also cleanses the palate from the heavy finish of the chocolate; after a sip, the palate is ready for another taste. You may even become convinced that chocolate pairs better with craft beer than red wine, which is thought of as a traditional pairing.

Full-flavored craft beers like Samuel Adams have helped elevate craft beer to its rightful place at the table as an ideal food pairing and alternative to wine. In fact, in a recent Gallup poll*, beer topped wine (and liquor) as America?s favorite alcoholic drink. Craft beer is an accessible food pairing too ? for about the same price as a mediocre bottle of wine, you can buy a great six-pack of flavorful, craft beer made with the highest quality ingredients.

Jennifer Glanville, Brewery Manager at the Samuel Adams Boston Brewery shares her passion for food and beer pairings:
?The idea of pairing beer and food has been around for centuries, but many people are just starting to explore the idea and have fun with it while learning what works. From a juicy burger to a rich cheese or dessert, there?s a beer to create that perfect pairing ? it?s all about letting the flavor of one enhance the other,? says Jennifer. ?We?re looking forward to hearing drinkers? responses to the Samuel Adams Beer Lover?s Chocolate Box. So many people think of wine as the quintessential chocolate pairing, but we think this pairing will certainly change some minds.?

What?Brad Kintzer, TCHO Chief Chocolate Maker has to say:
?As both a veteran chocolate maker and novice homebrewer, I?m amazed by the flavor complexity found in beer ? and by the similarities in the chocolate making process and how complementary the resulting flavors can be. Great beer ? like great chocolate ? is the result of a careful fermentation that yields an array of flavor possibilities,? says Brad. ?Many of the flavors found in cocoa and chocolate can also be found in beer, and you can taste the synergy when they are paired. Many food and drink combinations come off as a bit forced as ?pairings;? they just don?t seem to work together flavor-wise.? In developing the Beer Lover?s Chocolate Box, it was surprisingly natural to pair Samuel Adams brews with our TCHO chocolates.?

Where to find the chocolates and the brews:
The?Samuel Adams?Beer Lover?s Chocolate Box includes 12 8g chocolates, and the first 150 orders will also include two?Samuel Adams?Perfect Pint Glasses. The chocolate box is available nationwide for?$16.95?at?TCHO.com/SamuelAdams; limited quantities will also be available at the?Samuel Adams?Boston Brewery gift shop.?Samuel Adams?Winter Classics Variety Pack is available through December for a suggested retail price of?$13.99. To find the brews near you, visit?http://www.samueladams.com/find-a-sam.aspx.

NYC Beer and Wine Sommelier,?Gianni Cavicchi?recommends some additional food and beer pairing tips:
?Craft beer comes in such a variety of styles that it can complement most any meal and can add dimension to recipes in cooking. Beef is one of the best pairings for?Samuel Adams Boston Lager. The brew?s upfront malt flavor matches the caramelized flavors of the meat, and its hoppy finish prepares the palate for the next bite,? says Gianni. ?Samuel Adams Boston Lager?is also a great beer to match the intensity of a creamy cheese, like a Roquefort blue cheese. The deep flavors and firm texture of blue cheese needs a bold and well hopped beer to cleanse the palate, and the earthy, nutty, and smoky flavors in the beer are reflected and enhanced in the cheese. And of course, pairing chocolate and beer is a win-win. In fact, it?s actually better to pair beer with chocolate than wine because sometimes the intensity of chocolate takes over wine and the acidity in wine doesn?t balance.?

Samuel Adams?Beer Lover?s Chocolate Box Pairing Notes

  • Samuel Adams Boston Lager??+ PureNotes? Dark ?Chocolatey? (70%)
    • The malt character and subtle Noble Hop bitterness of Boston Lager bring out the rich, fudgy flavor and malty sweetness of TCHO?s ?Chocolatey.?
  • Samuel Adams??Winter Lager?+ PureNotes? Dark ?Citrus? (67%)
    • Winter Lager?s rich, hearty flavor is a pleasant balance to the delicate, smooth flavor of TCHO?s ?Citrus.? The subtle citrus notes in both the beer and the chocolate complement each other perfectly.
  • Samuel Adams??White Christmas + PureNotes? Dark ?Fruity? (68%)
    • White Christmas is a crisp, unfiltered white ale blended with holiday spices. TCHO?s ?Fruity? chocolate boasts bright berry notes that highlight the citrus and wheat characters of this ale, while bringing out the warmth of its spices.
  • Samuel Adams??Holiday Porter + PureNotes? Dark ?Nutty? (65%)
    • Holiday Porter is a robust and flavorful brew. The complex espresso and roasty notes of this beer are deliciously accentuated by the roasted nut and toasted malt notes of TCHO?s ?Nutty? chocolate.
  • Samuel Adams??Old Fezziwig??Ale + SeriousMilk? ?Classic? (39%)
    • Old Fezziwig?Ale is bursting with spices of the season and the rich flavors of roasted malt. The creamy, caramel notes of TCHO?s ?Classic? milk chocolate balance delicately with this beer?s ginger and cinnamon undertones.
  • Samuel Adams??Chocolate Bock + SeriousMilk? ?Cacao? (53%)
    • Chocolate Bock is a dark, decadent beer with a big, malty character, combined with the subtle sweetness of chocolate. TCHO?s ?Cacao? dark milk chocolate brings out the chocolate notes of this beer and complements the brew?s nutty and fruity notes.

Connect with Samuel Adams:

Connect with TCHO

*Source:?http://www.gallup.com/poll/1582/alcohol-drinking.aspx

ABOUT THE BOSTON BEER COMPANY:
The Boston Beer Company began in 1984 with a generations-old family recipe that Founder and Brewer Jim Koch uncovered in his father?s attic. Inspired and unafraid to challenge conventional thinking about beer, Jim brought the recipe to life in his kitchen. ?Pleased with the results of his work, Jim decided to sample his beer with bars in?Boston?in the hopes that drinkers would appreciate the complex, full-flavored beer he brewed fresh in America. ?That beer was aptly named Samuel Adams Boston Lager?, in recognition of one of our nation?s great founding fathers, a man of independent mind and spirit. ?Little did Jim know at the time,?Samuel Adams Boston Lager?soon became a catalyst of the American craft beer revolution.

Today, The Boston Beer Company brews more than 50 styles of beer. ?It relentlessly pursues the development of new styles and the perfection of classic beers by searching the world for the finest ingredients. ?Using the traditional four vessel brewing process, the Company often takes extra steps like dry-hopping, barrel-aging and a secondary fermentation known as krausening. ?The Company has also pioneered another revolution, the ?extreme beer? movement, where it seeks to challenge drinker?s perceptions of what beer can be. The Boston Beer Company has been committed to elevating the image of American craft beer by entering festivals and competitions around the globe, and in the past five years has won more awards in international beer competitions than any other brewery in the world. As an independent company, brewing quality beer remains its single focus. Although Samuel Adams beer is America?s largest-selling craft beer, it accounts for only one percent of the U.S. beer market. ?The Boston Beer Company will continue its independently-minded quest to brew great beer and to advocate for the growth of craft beer across America. For more information, please visit?www.samueladams.com.

ABOUT TCHO:
TCHO is a craft chocolate maker in?San Francisco, supplying bars of dark and milk chocolate, chocolate drenched treats, and drinking chocolate to consumers and professional chefs nationwide.? In addition to their store and website, TCHO products can be found in over 850 gourmet specialty and natural food retail accounts nationwide, including Whole Foods, Fairways, Gelsons, Bristol Farms, etc. Look for TCHO as an ingredient on dessert menus at your favorite restaurants, too.

TCHO is New American Chocolate. What does it take to make New American Chocolate? Obsession. Obsession with flavor. Obsession with innovation. Obsession over fusing the two to craft the very best chocolate, from bean to bar. The obsession begins at origin. We don?t just buy good beans, we help make the best beans. TCHOSource is our unique sourcing program, designed to obtain the best beans in the world while enabling the producers of those beans to earn a better living. For more information about TCHO?s flavor obsessions and the TCHOSource program, please check out our website at?http://www.tcho.com/tchosource.

?

Disclaimer: This post was published as a result of compensation received from the source. From time to time, companies may elect to send sample materials to BeerPulse and other beer publishers as a vehicle for spreading news about a new product or service. BeerPulse uses the term, ?supporter,? to describe such a company at the top of any post directly related to said product or service.

?

Source: http://beerpulse.com/2012/12/samuel-adams-teams-up-with-tcho-chocolate-to-create-a-holiday-chocolate-box/

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Archbiship Mamberti calls for religious freedom in ... - CBCP News

VATICAN CITY, Dec 7, 2012?Archbishop Dominique Mamberti, secretary for Relations with States addressed the 29th ?meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which was held Dublin, Ireland from on December 6th and 7th.

Archbishop Mamberti focused his address on the importance of religious freedom in Europe today. ?Among the fundamental freedoms, the right to freedom of religion figures prominently for the Holy See,? he said.

?The OSCE has always emphasized the positive contributions of religious communities to society. In this sense, the activity of the OSCE has ensured that public debate gives space to viewpoints inspired by a religious vision in all its dimensions, including ritual, worship, education, dissemination of information and the freedom to profess and choose one?s religion?.

?In fact, the rights associated with religion are all the more in need of protection if they are considered to clash with a prevailing secular ideology or with majority religious positions of an exclusive nature?, he continued.

Archbishop Mamberti underlined that freedom of religion cannot just be limited to freedom of worship but to the ?public dimension of religion? as well.? Such emphasis would therefore give ?the possibility of believers playing their part in building the social order.?

The Secretary for Relations with States also highlighted the continuing religious intolerance throughout the world, saying that ?it is well documented that Christians are among those most discriminated against, even within the OSCE region.? The archbishop said that despite commitments taken by participating states in the regions, other countries continue to pass ?intolerant and even discriminatory laws. Those laws, he added, essentially deny religious freedom.

?Christians are frequently targets of prejudice and threats of violence, perhaps on account of their active participation in public conversations to form societies more respectful of human life and dignity,? he said.

In light of the above, Archbishop Mamberti concluded, ?the OSCE should devote specific attention and develop effective proposals to fight intolerance and discrimination against Christians.? (Zenit)



Source: http://www.cbcpnews.com/cbcpnews/?p=9442

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Overnight Video: NYC Dark (Little green footballs)

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First 'snapshots' of electronic structure of a manganese complex related to water-splitting in photosynthesis

ScienceDaily (Nov. 9, 2012) ? Together with a large international research team, Johannes Messinger of Ume? University in Sweden has taken another step toward an understanding of photosynthesis and developing artificial photosynthesis. With a combination of a x-ray free-electron laser and spectroscopy, the team has managed to see the electronic structure of a manganese complex, a chemical compound related to how photosynthesis splits water.

The experiments used the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), which is a free-electron x-ray laser facility at Stanford University in the US. The wavelength of the laser is roughly the same as the breadth of an atom, and each pulse of light lasts 50 femtoseconds (10-15). This is an extremely short interval of time: there are more femtoseconds in one second than there are seconds in a person's life. Such extremely short wavelengths and short light pulses constitute ideal conditions for imaging chemical reactions with atomic resolution at room temperature while the chemical reactions are ongoing.

The research group has previously used LCLS to perform structural analyses of isolated photosynthesis complexes from plants' photosystem II at room temperature. Now the group has combined the method with spectroscopy and is the first team to succeed in seeing at LCLS the electronic structure of a manganese complex similar to that found in photosystem II. Manganese is a transitional metal that, together with calcium and oxygen, forms the water-splitting catalyst in photosystem II.

A very simple example of a spectrometer is a prism, which separates sunlight into all the colors of the rainbow. The spectrometer used in this study functions in a similar manner, but with a group of 16 specialized crystals that diffract the x-rays emitted from the sample in resonse of being excited by an x-ray pulse onto a detector array.

To the delight of the scientists, the manganese compounds remained intact long enough for them to observe detailed information about the electronic structure before the compounds were destroyed by the very intense X-ray laser beam.

"Having both structural information and spectroscopic information means that we can much better understand how the structural changes of the whole complex and the chemical changes on the active surface of the catalysts work together to enable the enzymes to perform complex chemical reactions at room temperature," says Johannes Messinger, professor at the Department of Chemistry at Ume? University.

The chemical reaction the research group aims to understand is the splitting of water in photosystem II, as this understanding is also key for developing artificial photosynthesis- that is, for building devices for producing hydrogen from sunlight and water. To be able to exploit sunlight for producing fuels that can be stored and the used when needed would help solve the world's ever-more acute energy problems.

The new research findings are being published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, PNAS.

Two major research projects at Ume? University are focusing on the development of artificial photosynthesis by imitating plants' very successful way of exploiting solar energy. Both projects ("solar fuels" and "artificial leaf") are directed by Johannes Messinger, professor at the Department of Chemistry at Ume? University.

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Journal Reference:

  1. R. Alonso-Mori, J. Kern, R. J. Gildea, D. Sokaras, T.-C. Weng, B. Lassalle-Kaiser, R. Tran, J. Hattne, H. Laksmono, J. Hellmich, C. Glockner, N. Echols, R. G. Sierra, D. W. Schafer, J. Sellberg, C. Kenney, R. Herbst, J. Pines, P. Hart, S. Herrmann, R. W. Grosse-Kunstleve, M. J. Latimer, A. R. Fry, M. M. Messerschmidt, A. Miahnahri, M. M. Seibert, P. H. Zwart, W. E. White, P. D. Adams, M. J. Bogan, S. Boutet, G. J. Williams, A. Zouni, J. Messinger, P. Glatzel, N. K. Sauter, V. K. Yachandra, J. Yano, U. Bergmann. Energy-dispersive X-ray emission spectroscopy using an X-ray free-electron laser in a shot-by-shot mode. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1211384109

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electronics/~3/a-GlTPLmvJc/121109084057.htm

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Pakistan's minority Hindus feel under attack

In this Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Hindu woman Pathani shows that attackers ripped her gold earrings at a local temple in Karachi, Pakistan. An attack on the Hindu temple on the outskirts of Pakistan?s largest city took place in late September on the Day of Love for the Prophet_and residents fear it will not be the last attack. It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in the 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

In this Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Hindu woman Pathani shows that attackers ripped her gold earrings at a local temple in Karachi, Pakistan. An attack on the Hindu temple on the outskirts of Pakistan?s largest city took place in late September on the Day of Love for the Prophet_and residents fear it will not be the last attack. It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in the 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

FILE- In this March 26, 2012, file photo, a Hindu mother Sulachhani Bai talks with reporters in Islamabad, Pakistan about her daughter who disappeared from her home in a small village in Pakistan. A few hours later the girl's father got a call telling him his daughter, a Hindu, had converted to Islam in order to marry a Muslim boy. It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in this 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. Pakistan?s Hindu community says it faces forced conversions of Hindu girls to Islam, a lack of legal recognition for their marriages, discrimination in services and physical abuse when they venture into the streets. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash, File)

In this Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Ragu Lal, member of Pakistani Hindu community shows remains of a worship idol smashed by attackers, at a local temple in Karachi, Pakistan. An attack on the Hindu temple on the outskirts of Pakistan?s largest city took place in late September on the Day of Love for the Prophet_and residents fear it will not be the last attack. It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in the 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

In this Oct. 4, 2012 photo, Pakistani Hindus gather at Sri Krishna Ram temple in Karachi, Pakistan. They told The Associated Press that attackers came after dusk and chanted into the night sky ?Kill the Hindus, kill the children of the Hindus,? as they smashed religious icons, ripped golden bangles off women?s arms and flashed pistols during an attack on the Hindu temple on the outskirts of Pakistan?s largest city in late September_and residents fear it will not be the last attack. It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in the 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) ? They came after dusk and chanted into the night sky "Kill the Hindus, kill the children of the Hindus," as they smashed religious icons, ripped golden bangles off women's arms and flashed pistols. It wasn't the first time that the Hindu temple on the outskirts of Pakistan's largest city was attacked, and residents here fear it will not be the last.

"People don't consider us as equal citizens. They beat us whenever they want," said Mol Chand, one of the teenage boys gathered at the temple. "We have no place to worship now."

It was the second time the Sri Krishna Ram temple has been attacked, and this time the mob didn't even bother to disguise their faces. The small temple, surrounded by a stone wall, is a tiny religious outpost in a dusty, hardscrabble neighborhood so far on the outskirts of the city that a sign on the main road wishes people leaving Karachi a good journey.

Local Muslim residents blamed people from a nearby ethnic Pashtun village for the attack, which took place in late September on the Day of Love for the Prophet, a national holiday declared by the government in response to an anti-Islam film made in the U.S. No one was seriously injured in the attack.

It was the latest in a rising tide of violence and discrimination against Hindus in this 95 percent Muslim country, where Islamic extremism is growing. Pakistan's Hindu community says it faces forced conversions of Hindu girls to Islam, a lack of legal recognition for their marriages, discrimination in services and physical abuse when they venture into the streets.

The story of the Hindu population in Pakistan is one of long decline. During partition in 1947, the violent separation of Pakistan and India into separate countries, hundreds of thousands of Hindus opted to migrate to India where Hinduism is the dominant religion. Those that remained and their descendants now make up a tiny fraction of Pakistan's estimated 190 million citizens, and are mostly concentrated in Sindh province in the southern part of the country.

Signs of their former stature abound in Karachi, the capital of Sindh. At the 150-year-old Swami Narayan Temple along one of the city's main roads, thousands of Hindus gather during the year to celebrate major religious holidays. Hindus at the 200-year-old Laxmi Narain Temple scatter the ashes of their cremated loved ones in the waters of an inlet from the Arabian Ocean.

But there are also signs of how far the community has fallen. Residents in a city hungry for land have begun to build over Hindu cemeteries, the community's leaders say. Hindus helped build Karachi's port decades ago, but none work there now.

Estimates of the size of the Hindu population in Pakistan are all over the map ? from 2.5 million or 10 million in Sindh province alone to 7 million across the country ? a reflection of the fact that the country hasn't had a census since 1998.

It isn't just Hindus who are facing problems. Other minorities like Christians, the mystical Muslim branch of Sufis and the Ahmadi sect have found themselves under attack in Pakistan, where the rise of Muslim fundamentalists has sometimes unleashed a violent opposition against those who don't follow their strict religious tenets.

The discrimination has prompted some Hindus to leave for India, activists warn, though the extent is not known. Around 3,000 Hindus left this year, part of a migration that began four years ago, sparked by discrimination and a general rise in crime in Sindh, said DM Maharaj, who heads an organization to help Hindus called Pakistan Hindu Sabha.

He said he recently talked to a group of Hindus preparing to move to India from rural Sindh, complaining that they can't eat in Muslim restaurants or that Muslim officials turned them down for farming loans. Even during recent floods, they said Muslims did not want them staying in the same refugee camps.

Other Hindu figures such as provincial assembly member Pitamber Sewami deny there's a migration at all, in a reflection of how sensitive the issue is. Earlier this year, there were a string of reports in Pakistani media about Hindus leaving the country, sparking a flurry of promises by Pakistani officials to investigate.

In India, a Home office official said the Indian government noticed an upward trend of people coming from Pakistan but called reports of Pakistanis fleeing to India "exaggerated." He said he does not have exact figures on how many Pakistani Hindus have stayed in India after entering the country on tourist visas. The official spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the topic.

There's more of a consensus of the seriousness of the problem of forced conversion of Hindus.

Zohra Yusuf, the president of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan says the pattern goes like this: A Hindu girl goes missing and then resurfaces days or weeks later married to a Muslim boy. During court hearings to determine whether the conversion was voluntary, students from nearby Islamic schools called madrassas often flood the room, trying to intimidate the judges by chanting demands that the conversion be confirmed.

Maharaj says he's tried to intervene in roughly 100 cases of forced conversions but has only succeeded in returning a girl safely back to her family once. If a girl decides to renounce Islam and return to Hinduism, she could be signing a death warrant for herself and her family even if her conversion was forced.

The Hindu community has also been hurt by a lack of unity within its ranks. Hindu society within Pakistan and elsewhere has historically been divided by caste, a system of social stratification in which the lower castes are often seen as inferior. Members of the lower castes in Pakistan say it wasn't until two girls from a high-caste family were forcibly converted this year that high-caste Hindus took the issue seriously, although it's been happening for years.

"We always fight our war ourselves," said Bholoo Devjee, a Hindu activist from Karachi, speaking about the lower castes.

In recent months the government has begun to take the concerns of the Hindu community more seriously. In Sindh province, legislators proposed a law to prevent forced conversions in part by implementing a waiting period before a marriage between a Hindu and a Muslim can go forward, and there's discussion about proposing such a law on the national level as well.

In the case of the Sri Krishna Ram temple, law enforcement authorities opened a blasphemy case against the people who rampaged through the building. But residents here are skeptical that these developments signify any long-term improvement in their plight. Weeks after the incident no arrests have been made, and the Hindus complain that no high-ranking Hindu officials have come to visit them or help them get compensation.

Sunda Maharaj, the spiritual leader at the temple, which was first attacked in January 2011, said he and the other residents do not want to move to India. "We are Pakistani," he said.

But he would like more help from the government, specifically a checkpoint to stop people from getting close to the temple and money for the Hindus to buy weapons.

"Next time anyone comes we can kill them or die defending our temple," he said.

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Follow Rebecca Santana on Twitter (at)ruskygal.

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Associated Press writers Adil Jawad in Karachi and Nirmala George in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-11-08-Pakistan-Hindus%20Threatened/id-f692faa7df2a48218e10ef2e1644bb1b

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