Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Ratings: 'The Voice' rises as NBC takes night

{ttle}

{cptn}","template_name":"ss_thmb_play_ttle","i18n":{"end_of_gallery_header":"End of Gallery","end_of_gallery_next":"View Again"},"metadata":{"pagination":"{firstVisible} - {lastVisible} of {numItems}","ult":{"spaceid":"7664811","sec":""}}},{"id": "hcm-carousel-1491049394", "dataManager": C.dmgr, "mediator": C.mdtr, "group_name":"hcm-carousel-1491049394", "track_item_selected":1,"tracking":{ "spaceid" : "7664811", "events" : { "click" : { "any" : { "yui-carousel-prev" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"prev","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } }, "yui-carousel-next" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"next","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // no more pages, don't beacon again // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } } } } } } })); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function() { try{ if (Math.floor(Math.random()*10) == 1) { var loc = window.location, decoded = decodeURI(loc.pathname), encoded = encodeURI(decoded), uri = loc.protocol + "//" + loc.host + encoded + ((loc.search.length > 0) ? loc.search + '&' : '?') + "_cacheable=1", xmlhttp; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); else xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); xmlhttp.open("GET",uri,true); xmlhttp.send(); } }catch(e){} })(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings = '"projectId": "10001256862979", "documentName": "", "documentGroup": "", "ywaColo" : "vscale3", "spaceId" : "7664811" ,"customFields" : { "12" : "classic", "13" : "story" }'; Y.Media.YWA.init(Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if(document.onclick===YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.newClick){document.onclick=YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.oldClick;} }); }); });

U.S. nuclear plant declares 'alert' after Sandy storm surge: NRC

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Exelon Corp declared an "alert" at its New Jersey Oyster Creek nuclear power plant due to a record storm surge, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Monday, warning that a further rise in water levels could force operators to use emergency water supplies from a fire hose to cool spent uranium fuel rods.

The alert -- the second lowest of four NRC action levels -- came after water levels at the plant rose by more than 6.5 feet, potentially affecting the pumps that circulate water through the plant, an NRC spokesman said.

Those pumps are not essential since the plant is shut for planned refueling at the moment. However a further rise to 7 feet could submerge the service water pump motor that is used to cool the water in the spent fuel pool.

The spokesman said the company could use water from a fire hose to cool the pool if necessary. The used uranium rods in the pool could cause the water to boil within 25 hours without additional coolant; in an extreme scenario the rods could overheat, risking the eventual release of radiation.

The NRC said in a statement that it expected water levels would begin to abate within the next several hours.

Sandy made landfall earlier in the evening as the most powerful Atlantic storm to hit the United States, bringing an over 13-foot storm surge.

There have been about a dozen instances of alert-level nuclear incidents in the past four years, according to NRC press releases. An alert-level incident means there is a "potential substantial degradation in the level of safety" at a reactor.

The concerns over the status of the spent fuel pool at Oyster Creek were reminiscent of the fears that followed the Fukushima disaster in Japan last year, when helicopters and fire hoses were enlisted to ensure the pools remained filled with fresh, cool water.

The nuclear industry has said that the spent fuel rods at Fukushima were never exposed to the air.

(Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Ed Davies)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-nuclear-plant-declares-alert-sandy-storm-surge-045428689.html

dallas cowboys Winsor McCay ufc Amanda Todd washington nationals Gary Collins bus driver uppercut

New York's post-Sandy divide: Those with power and those without

Andrew Burton / Getty Images

Superstorm Sandy made landfall Monday evening on a destructive and deadly path across the Northeast.

By Emily Flitter, Reuters

NEW YORK -- Sandy split New York City in two.?

The massive storm left people damp, miserable and in the dark in the lower part of the city. Yet in much of the rest of Manhattan, life was almost normal, albeit without some of the usual urban comforts.?

Almost every street below Times Square in the city's Midtown district lost power on Monday night after an explosion at a Consolidated Edison power station, and it may not return for up to four days. A number of these areas had already been hit by flood waters.?

As a result, residents in Lower Manhattan emerged from their homes in search of the necessities of life on Tuesday. Ariel Ramos, 33, waited in the doorway of the Loisada Deli for ice to keep food in his refrigerator from spoiling. "What else you got?" he shouted into the darkened store. "Talk to me. I need stuff!" The clerk said he had no more bread, but he did have eggs. Ramos asked for eggs and a pack of cigarettes. "We have no electricity, no heat and no water," he said.?


Further north, restaurants and bars were open for business. With schools and the mass transit system closed, families strolled around taking pictures of felled trees. Burgers and Cupcakes on 35th Street and 9th Avenue was busy. A small crowd grabbed 99-cent slices of pizza on 41st Street, and a bakery called the Little Pie Company had a line 13 people long.

As the worst of the storm hit New York City late on Monday, water poured through streets and into buildings on Manhattan's southern tip, swamping parked cars and cascading through subway stations and tunnels. That was when the power transfer station on 14th street exploded and plunged the lower half of the island into darkness.?

Daylight on Tuesday coaxed residents, many of whom were spending a second day away from work, from their homes. Some were jogging or strolling with their dogs, picking their way over downed branches. Young people with cameras took pictures of flooded stores downtown. But for others, sightseeing was the last thing on their mind.?

Raymond Torres, who spent the night in his apartment in the Baruch Houses complex, located near the Williamsburg Bridge on Manhattan's Lower East Side, looked hopelessly at his soggy Honda, its interior full of leaves left behind when the water receded. His daughter, Diana, stood ready to take him to her apartment in the Bronx, where there was still power.?

Playground
For some, the FDR Drive, which runs along Manhattan's east side and which is normally jam-packed with traffic, was a giant park as they strolled among the downed trees and other detritus of the flood. The highway was closed to traffic in both directions, except for emergency vehicles.?

Chinatown, where the narrow streets are usually crowded with people and rich with smells of fish and spices, was mostly closed, its jumble of neon signs darkened.?

The boundary of the power outage, which varied from east to west, was noticeable not only by its working traffic lights but also by the sudden presence of cooking smells from buildings that still had power. The streets in Midtown Manhattan were drier compared with those farther south.?

In Herald Square, at 34th Street and 6th Avenue, a family from France stood in drizzling rain, trying to decide what to do for the day. The museums they wanted to visit were closed.?

Florence Buin, visiting from Rennes with her husband and two children, said the family stayed in their Times Square hotel, expecting to have to weather a severe onslaught from the storm, but what they experienced was very mild.?

"We were quite surprised," she said. "We were waiting all day long and we saw nothing."?

The Broadway musical for which they had tickets on Sunday night was canceled and so was their train trip to Washington on Monday. "In France we say 'a lot of noise for nothing,'" Buin said.?

Gouging
The Upper West Side, a wealthy enclave of Manhattan, did not lose power and only New York's mass transit standstill was keeping people home. Several grocery stores, restaurants and bars were open. Some people were taking pictures of each other in front of a car hit by a fallen tree.?

Further south, in front of the Archstone apartment building on 40th Street and 2nd Avenue, a group of 20-somethings with coffee in their hands sat in front of the building charging their iPhones. They said they lived just one block south on 39th Street, where power had been cut off.?

Lee Fleischer, a professor at Brooklyn College who lives in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, was canvassing the streets trying to find D batteries for his flashlight. The price of two batteries, which normally cost around $5, had been jacked up to as much as $15 in the few neighborhood bodegas that were open despite the loss of power. "They can get away with this very easily," he said. "They are exploiting their customers and the community, though."?

At La Delice Pastry Shop, in nearby Kips Bay, the price for a cup of coffee had been raised from $1 to $3. A store clerk said the reason was that they had to use bottled water to make the coffee.?

In Manhattan's Lower East Side, Thea Lucas, 87, who lives alone, said she had come down from her apartment to warm herself up with a walk and to feed seven cats in her street she feels responsible for. "Cats are survivors. They all waited for me at the usual spot even though I came out much later today than I usually do."?

"I'm lucky to have gas; I can make hot water. But there is no heating and I'm all cold inside." She said the night was difficult without electricity. "There is nothing to do at home. You cannot read with a flash light, I used to do that but I'm not 20 anymore."?

Oil slicks
Across the Brooklyn Bridge, it was a similar story, with low-lying areas still struggling on Tuesday while on the higher ground life was getting back to normal.?

Brooklyn's Gowanus canal, which was a pale green color on Monday, had turned black. Receding waters had left oil slicks on the streets and sidewalks. Wood and other debris marked the high water mark, more than a block away from the canal.?

A brick house located just west of the canal on Carroll Street had steam rising from its foundation. A man who said he was a resident but wouldn't provide his name said the basement had filled with water from the canal in the night, and now the electrical wiring was steaming. He said the fire department told him it would not come unless the structure was physically on fire. "I'll wait, and then it'll go up like a tinderbox," he said.?

The Brooklyn Navy Yard, which now houses small businesses as well as a dock, was covered in about a foot of water. At the peak of the storm, it was 5 feet high. "There were 17 of us trying to pump out the docks when the pump room flooded," said Nigel Friday, 36.

The pump room is on three levels about 50 feet underground and workers were on all three levels trying to keep the water from hitting electrical components with sandbags, Friday said. "Then water started gushing in through the entrance we took to enter the pump room," he said. "That's when we had to drop everything and run out the other way. It was like a movie."?

Higher up, Park Slope, a section of Brooklyn popular with young families, was largely saved from harm. A few branches had fallen on the street, and some store front awnings had been stripped off by heavy winds, but that was about the worst of it.?

People were strolling about, bars and restaurants were open, albeit with limited menus. Thistle Hill Tavern on 15th street in Brooklyn, was offering "Frankenstorm" drink specials.?

Nearby, in Brooklyn's Prospect Park, massive felled oak, maple and sycamore trees lay across walking and bicycle paths. A police vehicle driving the park's interior road announced over a loud speaker that the park was closed, yet area residents poured in. Children climbed on downed trees, and runners weaved through the many strollers and dog walkers.?

Additional reporting by Robin Respaut, Olivia Oran, Ilaina Jonas, Mirjam Donath, Jeanine Prezioso, Ed McAllister, Atossa Abrahamian; Editing by Eddie Evans, Martin Howell and Cynthia Osterman.

More content from NBCNews.com:

Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/30/14814451-new-yorks-post-sandy-divide-those-with-power-and-those-without?lite

2013 nissan altima masters par 3 contest google augmented reality glasses wonderlic test texas tornado fantasy baseball jared sullinger

Federal student loan program is necessary | TheGazette

I?m a freshman at the University of Iowa who?s voting for President Obama. There are many reasons why I support Obama and oppose Mitt Romney. One reason is Romney?s lack of understanding of the importance of the federal student loan program.

Romney opposes direct government student loans, and wants to return to the system where private banks and loan companies issued student loans at high interest rates, which the government repaid if the student defaulted. This system made no sense, and only benefited the banks. Students paid higher interest rates and the private lender had no risk.

It could be because Obama needed loans to attend college, and Romney?s dad helped finance his education at Stanford, BYU, and Harvard, but clearly Romney just doesn?t understand why the federal student loan program is necessary.

This spring at a college in Ohio in response to a student?s question regarding the cost of college and need for the federal loan program, Romney actually said students should ?get the education, borrow money if you have to from your parents.? How clueless does Romney have to be to think paying for college is as simple as asking your parents for a loan?

Molly Brown

Iowa City

Source: http://thegazette.com/2012/10/30/federal-student-loan-program-is-necessary/

cleveland cavaliers cleveland cavaliers war horse k cups best buy we bought a zoo we bought a zoo

Monday, October 29, 2012

No. 1 Alabama rolls past No. 13 MSU, 38-7

Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott (15) is sacked by Alabama linebacker Denzel Devall (30) and defensive lineman Quinton Dial (90) during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Mississippi State quarterback Dak Prescott (15) is sacked by Alabama linebacker Denzel Devall (30) and defensive lineman Quinton Dial (90) during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Alabama quarterback AJ McCarron (10) reacts with tight end Michael Williams (89) after throwing him a touchdown pass during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Mississippi State at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Alabama quarterback AJ McCarron (10) reacts after throwing a touchdown pass during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. At left is Mississippi State linebacker Cameron Lawrence (10). (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Mississippi State quarterback Tyler Russell (17) throws despite the defense of Alabama linebacker Adrian Hubbard (42) during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

Alabama quarterback AJ McCarron (10) is chased by Mississippi State linebacker Matthew Wells (22) during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Saturday, Oct. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)

(AP) ? Alabama brushed aside a top SEC West challenger and roared on to an even tougher one.

AJ McCarron passed for 208 yards and two touchdowns, and the top-ranked Crimson Tide reached the end zone on its first three possessions in a muscle-flexing 38-7 victory over No. 13 Mississippi State on Saturday night.

That blazing start indicated Bama wasn't looking ahead to No. 6 LSU in a national game rematch ? at least until the second quarter.

"We felt like we had something to prove, because they felt like they could come in our house and beat us," Tide linebacker CJ Mosley said. "As a defense we did a great job of stopping the run and making them try to beat us with the pass."

Point made. The Tide (8-0, 5-0 Southeastern Conference) quickly turned the meeting of unbeaten SEC West teams into a mismatch with a 21-0 lead barely a minute into the second quarter.

"We certainly had a lot of respect for Mississippi State," Alabama coach Nick Saban said. "You don't get to be 7-0 by accident. I think it was important for us to get off to a fast start in this game, preparing yourself to fight a 15-round fight, knowing that you're going to have to take the fight to them in the early rounds.

"You can't necessarily win the fight in the first round, but you can certainly lose it. I think we had the right amount of energy and the right physical energy to play in the game."

The Bulldogs (7-1, 3-1) came in averaging 36.7 points but didn't score until the final minutes. They had been leading the nation in turnover margin but lost two fumbles and an interception.

McCarron completed 16 of 23 passes before sitting out the fourth quarter. He headed to the locker room briefly early in the quarter with a bruised back but returned to the sideline. Saban said he could have returned and will be fine for the LSU game.

The Tide has now won the past five meetings and this one turned into more of the same, despite considerably more hype.

"They're No. 1 for a reason ? they don't make mistakes," Mississippi State cornerback Johnthan Banks said. "I haven't played a team like that since I've been in college. I have great respect for AJ McCarron. He doesn't make mistakes."

The Bulldogs had started 7-0 for only the second time in program history. Instead of proving they were legitimate SEC contenders, this game showed they have a ways to go.

McCarron hit Kenny Bell in stride for a 57-yard touchdown to cap a drive that started at Alabama's 4. He then found tight end Michael Williams for a 9-yard score early in the second quarter.

His 18 touchdowns tie him with John Parker Wilson for second-most in school history, two behind Greg McElroy's single-season record.

T.J. Yeldon rushed for 84 yards on 10 carries, including an 11-yard touchdown. The subs tacked on two touchdowns after turnovers in the fourth quarter.

It wasn't the finish that mattered the most, but the start.

"This is a big game for us and we knew that they were going to come out really believing they could win the game," Tide center Barrett Jones said. "And that's when we knew we had to come out and play hard in the beginning. We really started fast. That's something we talked about all week."

Alabama held the SEC's leading rusher, LaDarius Perkins, to 38 yards on 15 carries after he came in with three straight 100-yard efforts. The Tide outgained Mississippi State 414-256.

Tyler Russell completed 15 of 30 passes for 169 yards but threw just his second interception of the season and took a number of hits from the nation's top defense.

"(The Bulldog players) expected to win the game," coach Dan Mullen said. "Not a lot of other guys did but our guys expected to win. All the little things you need to do, we didn't do.

"If we scored in the red zone, it's 24-17."

Alabama's 24-0 halftime lead held until Mississippi State had a muffed punt and another fumble in the fourth. Then Alabama's backup quarterbacks came in to convert those mistakes into touchdowns.

Phillip Ely hit Eddie Lacy for a 27-yarder and then Blake Sims led another scoring drive capped with a 3-yard touchdown run by freshman Kenyan Drake.

The Bulldogs finally scored on backup quarterback Dak Prescott's 2-yard touchdown pass to Robert Johnson with 4:39 left in the game.

Mississippi State couldn't cash in on two other scoring chances before the game really got out of hand. First, Dee Milliner blocked a 31-yard field goal attempt on the opening drive.

Then, Russell drove the Bulldogs 97 yards from their own 2-yard line before Robert Lester picked off a pass in the end zone late in the third.

"Things we've done right all year long, we couldn't do that against the No. 1 team in the country," Mississippi State linebacker Cameron Lawrence said. "These boys are the real deal.

"I feel like we played our worst game and Alabama capitalized on our mistakes. "

Mississippi State managed to slow down Alabama's offense for a stretch after getting bullied in the first 17 minutes but couldn't find many holes in the defense.

The Tide has two shutouts and has lost two more in the final minutes with the reserves on the field.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-28-FBC-T25-Mississippi-St-Alabama/id-e8d966ddbf8d46fab60cde15b753d9ea

ipad mini Kevin Krim Autumn Pasquale ann coulter msnbc Iron Man 3 Trailer minecraft

Friday, October 26, 2012

Sectarian violence worsens in Myanmar's volatile west

YANGON (Reuters) - Hundreds of homes burned and gunfire rang out as sectarian violence raged for a fifth day between Rohingya Muslims and Buddhists in western Myanmar on Thursday, pushing the death toll to nearly 60 and testing the country's nascent democracy.

Security forces struggled to stem Myanmar's worst communal unrest since clashes in June killed more than 80 people and displaced at least 75,000 in Rakhine State.

The latest violence in Rakhine has spread to several towns, including commercially important Kyaukpyu, where a multi-billion-dollar China-Myanmar pipeline starts.

The violence is one of the biggest tests yet of a reformist government that has vowed to forge unity in one of Asia's most ethnically diverse countries.

Win Myaing, information officer of Rakhine State government, told Reuters that 56 people, including 31 women, had died and 64 had been wounded as of Wednesday evening.

Access to Rakhine State was restricted and information hard to verify, but witnesses said at least three more people were killed on Thursday.

A statement from the president's office read on state television spoke of only 12 people dead as of Wednesday and said 1,948 houses and eight religious buildings had been destroyed.

It said the international community was watching Myanmar and the violence was against the interests of the nation.

"Therefore, the police and the army in cooperation with the people will take effective measures to ensure the rule of law, community peace and tranquility," it said.

The United Nations called for calm, saying large numbers of people were reported to be seeking refuge in already overcrowded camps near the state capital, Sittwe.

"The U.N. is gravely concerned about reports of a resurgence of inter-communal conflict in several areas in Rakhine State which has resulted in deaths and has forced thousands of people, including women and children, to flee their homes," Ashok Nigam, U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Myanmar, said in a statement.

The United States, which has been lifting sanctions on Myanmar as relations improve with its reformist government, said it was deeply concerned over the violence and urged all parties to show restraint and immediately halt attacks.

There were widespread unconfirmed reports of razed and burning homes, gunfights and Rohingya fleeing by boat.

A representative of the Wan Lark foundation, which helps ethnic Rakhine Buddhists, said local people told him trouble had flared in the early hours of Thursday in Kyauk Taw, a town north of the state capital, Sittwe.

"Fires started in Pike Thel village. About 20 houses were burned. There was gunfire reported and, as far as we know, three Rakhines were shot dead on the spot," Tun Min Thein told Reuters by telephone.

A senior official from the Rakhine State government also said three people had been killed in Kyauk Taw. Witnesses reported soldiers arriving and at least one road closed.

CHINESE INVESTMENT

In Yathedaung, a town northwest of Sittwe, security forces opened fire in a Rohingya district and about 10 houses were burned, Tun Min Thein added, reporting what he had been told by locals. Fires were also seen in Pauktaw, a town east of Sittwe.

That followed violence in Kyaukpyu, about 120 km (75 miles) south of Sittwe, where official media said one person had been killed, 28 wounded and 800 houses burned down.

The area is crucial to China's most strategic investment in Myanmar: twin pipelines that will stretch from Kyaukpyu on the Bay of Bengal to China's energy-hungry western provinces, bringing oil and natural gas to one of China's most undeveloped regions.

Rohingyas are officially stateless. Buddhist-majority Myanmar's government regards the estimated 800,000 Rohingyas in the country as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and denies them citizenship. Bangladesh has refused to grant Rohingyas refugee status since 1992.

Around 50 boats carrying Rohingyas were reported to have left the Kyaukpyu area on Wednesday and were spotted apparently heading for Sittwe, Tun Min Thein said.

It was unclear what set off the latest arson and killing that started on Sunday. In June, tension had flared after the rape and murder of a Buddhist woman that was blamed on Muslims, but there was no obvious spark this time.

Sittwe was the scene of violence in June but has escaped the latest unrest. Thousands lost their homes there in June and many Rohingyas left or were moved out of the town by the authorities.

Curfews were imposed in Minbya and Mrauk Oo north of Sittwe from Monday after violence there. It was unclear if the authorities had extended that to other areas.

President Thein Sein's government has negotiated ceasefires with most ethnic rebel groups that have fought for autonomy for half a century, but a U.N. human rights official said the government was not moving decisively to reduce tensions.

"We see that they are not at this point taking the proper decisions toward a real solution," Tomas Ojea Quintana, the U.N. special rapporteur for human rights in Myanmar, told reporters.

"I don't see a real analysis of the situation."

Rights groups such as Amnesty International have called on Myanmar to amend or repeal a 1982 citizenship law to end the Rohingyas' stateless condition.

In Washington, the State Department urged Myanmar to grant full humanitarian access to the affected areas, launch a dialogue aimed at reconciliation, and open investigations into the violence.

"We join the international community and call on authorities within the country, including the government, civil and religious leaders to take immediate action to halt the ongoing violence," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told a news briefing.

(Reporting by Aung Hla Tun and Reuters staff reporters; Writing by Alan Raybould and Jason Szep; Editing by Michael Roddy and Nick Macfie)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sectarian-violence-worsens-myanmars-volatile-west-232119281.html

2013 ford fusion lsu football lsu football bcs jay z glory alabama crimson tide barry larkin

Credit Suisse posts 63 percent drop in 3Q profits

(AP) ? Credit Suisse Group has posted a 63 percent decline in third-quarter net profits over a year ago in the same quarter.

Switzerland's second-biggest bank says it had net profits of 254 million Swiss francs ($272 million) between July and September, compared with 683 million francs ($785 million) in the comparable period of 2011.

The company attributed the decline to an accounting charge on the bank's own debt.

The Zurich-based bank said in a statement Thursday before the opening of the Zurich exchange that it intends to cut another 1 billion francs in costs in 2014 and 2015, on top of 3 billion in previously announced cost-cutting measures it plans to have achieved by the end of next year.

Chief Executive Brady Dougan said the bank has "significantly cut costs and improved efficiencies" while also reducing risks and strengthening its capital cushion.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-25-Switzerland-Earns-Credit%20Suisse/id-414f323a141c452cae0a2743c6ed530e

the raven zerg rush david wilson playstation all stars battle royale kim zolciak kim zolciak travis pastrana

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Download Mobile Master 8.5.4

General Info

The mobile phone and sync tool for your mobile/cell phone, handset

Price: 48 USD (Buy Now) Hits: 9 visitors Publisher: Jumping Bytes OS Support: Win2000, Win7 x32, Win7 x64, WinVista, WinXP License: Shareware Date added: 25 Oct 2012 Last Update: 01 Oct 2012 Downloads: 0

See full specifications >>

Users rating:

0/5 (0 votes)

Editor's rating:
Visitors Rating:

0/5 (0 votes)


Mobile Master Publisher's description

The mobile phone and sync tool for your mobile/cell phone, handset

Mobile Master is a powerful PIM for mobile phones and smartphones.
You can synchronize mobile phones (addresses and calendar) with Outlook (97-2007), Outlook Express, Windows contacts/address book, Lotus Notes, Thunderbird, Palm Desktop, Novell Groupwise Tobit David InfoCenter, Eudora, The Bat, Opera. Many filters and options.
Transfer contacts from your old phone to yur new iPhone or Android handset with the included Copy Station.
Or easily load, edit and save your phones address book, calendar and notes.
Import contacts from: iPhone, iTunes, iCloud, Nokia (OVI/PC) Suite, Google contacts, many files, ...
Browse through the phones file system and copy files.
Synchronize your iTunes playlists and files or copy WinAmp playlists to the phone.
Addins provide full integration in Outlook, Lotus Notes, Palm Desktop, Thunderbird and Tobit David (e.g. one button to save a contact and send it to the phone)
For Sony Ericsson, Samsung, Motorola, Nokia, LG and BenQ Siemens handsets/cell phones (GSM and UMTS).
More than 400 models supported. For all supported models see the homepage.
Many im- and export filters.
With the SMS Servant you can easily send and receive SMS (e.g. in Outlook like Emails).
Copy your phone/address book from one phone to an iPhone, Android phone, Windows Phone or other cell or smart phone (e.g. from Nokia to Sony Ericsson and vice versa)
Address book converter: copy contacts from e.g. Palm Desktop to Thunderbird or Novell Groupwise, etc. (without any phone required)
Remote control your PC (e.g. Winamp, PowerDVD) using a Sony Ericsson phone (e.g. via Bluetooth)
Remote control your PC via SMS.
Address book converter to copy contacts from e.g. Lotus Notes to Thunderbird.


Submit Your Review


You need to be signed in to review this program.

Your review will be listed after a administrator approves it!

Source: http://www.free-to-try.com/windows/communications/telephony/mobile-master/

clear channel drexel dale george will obama birth certificate nick cannon lindsay lohan saturday night live

Today's Wayback Top Tenner: Oct. 25, 1970 ? The Full Moxie ...

Okay ?honestly, I don?t think she?s had ANY work done. </sarcasm>

The number 4 song from this day in 1970: ?Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves,? by Cher. CLASSIC!

Pin It Tweet

Traci

Traci Arbios is a caucasian female. She?s almost certain of it. E-mail her at traci@thefullmoxie.com

More Posts

Follow Me:
TwitterFacebookPinterest

Source: http://thefullmoxie.com/2012/10/25/todays-wayback-top-tenner-oct-25-1970/

susan powell megamillions winners university of louisville louisville ky final four lotto winners mega ball winning numbers

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Pakistan-India jurists can end impasse: CJP


ISLAMABAD - The jurists being the most law-knowing and mature people and capable of moulding public opinion, can play a role in creating the environment for peaceful interaction between the two neighbours, but also ensuring that such interaction is translated into real trust and harmony between the two countries.
Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry said that while addressing the delegation of Indian lawyers, who visited the Supreme Court on Monday.
"I believe that the present visit and interaction between the jurists of India and Pakistan will go a long way in understanding each other better and help remove lingering sense of mistrust and apathy towards each other," he added. CJ said that lawyers are among the most active and knowledgeable segment of a society.
?They play a leading role in moulding the public opinion on important issues of public policy. Pakistan and India are among those two nations whose very existence was made possible primarily because of the visionary leadership of their founding fathers who were also distinguished jurists of their times,? he added. The institutions of judiciary both in Pakistan and India have a common cultural, social and legal background, he said.
"We draw inspiration from the same source of jurisprudence and follow the same pluralistic and all encompassing representative democracy based on the twin principles of rule of law and supremacy of the Constitution.?
"Given the peculiar evolution of democratic institutions and commonality in legal principle in our two countries, we can learn form each others' jurisprudence," he added. The Supreme Court of India has rendered benchmark judgments in the field of Public Interest litigation, he said.
Similarly, Supreme Court of Pakistan has also endeavoured to ensure implementation of fundamental rights to the citizens as enshrined in the Constitution by taking suo moto notices in wider public interest, CJ stated.
Even today, the role of lawyers and jurists cannot be under estimated in terms of providing a strong leadership in both the countries, he stressed.
CJ stated:it is a proven fact of history and considered opinion of historians and scholars of law and politics that only those societies thrive and prosper where the twin principles of "rule of law" and "supremacy of Constitution" are practiced.
The present Pakistan has successfully transitioned itself to rule of law based upon complete implementation of Constitutionalism in the country, he said.
?Our law-enforcement agencies are striving hard to check terrorism menace and the court system in the country including the Anti-Terrorism Courts are geared to handle these cases expeditiously and dispense justice in a forthright and transparent manner. Therefore, I do not see any reason why Pakistan should not regain its position as a civilised and progressive country, which is at peace with itself and with countries in the region and beyond, ? he added.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/Business/~3/MbgxX2rzI6c/pakistan-india-jurists-can-end-impasse-cjp

valentines day cards hallmark grammy winners obama budget woolly mammoth belize resorts nikki minaj grammy performance

Liz Taylor tops list of highest earning dead stars

Elizabeth Taylor surpassed Michael Jackson as the highest-earning dead celebrity in the past year, with her estate pulling in $210 million, much of it from the auction of her jewels, costumes and artwork, Forbes said on Wednesday.

Jackson, who died in 2009, dropped into second place with earnings of $145 million, followed by Elvis Presley with $55 million.

In addition to the Taylor auction, which totaled $184 million, the actress, who passed away in 2011 at the age of 79, also earned $75 million from sales of her top selling perfume White Diamonds.

"The rest of the money came from property sales and residuals from Taylor's movies," according to Forbes. "After 'Cleopatra,' the star smartly negotiated a 10 percent ownership in each of her films."

    1. Special Olympian fires back at Ann Coulter over 'retard' tweets

      "Ms. Coulter, you, and society, need to learn that being compared to people like me should be considered a badge of honor,...

    2. Who needs Halloween? Girl, 8, dresses as historic figures all year
    3. Cruise sues for $50 million over Suri stories
    4. White Chocolate Peppermint Pringles: Like toothpaste on a chip
    5. High school kicker with autism makes game-winning field goal

Although Taylor bumped Jackson from the top spot, Forbes said the pop star is likely to regain it next year due to steady revenues from music sales and other ventures.

Cartoonist Charles Schulz, who created the Peanuts comic strip, came in at No. 4 with earnings of $37 million, followed by reggae star Bob Marley with $17 million.

Forbes compiled the ranking by analyzing the dead celebrities' earnings between October 2011-2012.

"We count money coming into the estate and we don't deduct for how the estate handles it," Forbes said.

Films stars and musicians dominated the list but Nobel-prize winning physicist Albert Einstein tied with Marilyn Monroe for seventh place, with each earning $10 million.

The 13 dead celebrities on the list earned a total of $532.5 million.

Here is the full list.

(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012. Click For Restrictions - http://about.reuters.com/fulllegal.asp

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/49537068/ns/today-money/

pippa middleton space shuttle discovery spacex tupac hologram tupac back tax deadline death race

Over 100,000 Syrian refugees in Lebanon now: UNHCR

GENEVA (Reuters) - Lebanon has become the third of Syria's neighbors after Turkey and Jordan to register more than 100,000 refugees from Syria's civil war, the U.N. refugee agency said on Tuesday.

In all, more than 358,000 Syrians fleeing the 19-month-old conflict have registered in four neighboring states, including Iraq, and tens of thousands more have fled but not sought international assistance, it said.

Lebanon has seen its own Syrian-related unrest, exacerbated by the assassination last week of a senior intelligence officer who had pursued evidence of Syrian attempts to destabilize Lebanon.

"In Lebanon, we have not seen, despite the recent turmoil, a decrease in people crossing," UNHCR chief spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told a news briefing in Geneva.

Jordan now has 105,737 registered Syrian refugees, followed by 101,834 in Turkey, 101,283 in Lebanon and 42,661 in Iraq. The UNHCR has forecast that a total of up to 700,000 Syrian refugees may have fled abroad by the end of the year.

Fleming called for international support for countries hosting the refugees. "These nations should not be expected to carry the entire burden alone," she said.

Some 6,815 Syrian refugees have registered in North Africa, nearly all in Egypt, but the Egyptian government has said that there are up to 150,000 Syrians in the country, who may still seek refugee status if their money or visas run out, Fleming said.

She also urged European countries to keep open their borders for people fleeing Syria and grant them asylum.

Some 16,474 Syrians sought asylum in the European Union, Norway or Switzerland between January 2011 and August 2012, according to the UNHCR's latest figures.

"We have seen some uneven treatment depending on the asylum systems in the countries in Europe. However, we have not seen any indication that borders are closed," Fleming said.

International mediator Lakhdar Brahimi, who held talks in Damascus on Sunday with President Bashar al-Assad, has proposed that Assad's forces and the rebels hold fire during the three-day Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha which starts on Friday.

The UNHCR said that "in anticipation of a possible truce during Eid", it was preparing 10,000 emergency relief kits for displaced families in areas around Aleppo, Syria's largest city, and Idlib that it had so far been unable to reach.

Syrian rebels cast doubt on Monday on prospects for a temporary truce, saying it was not clear how it could be implemented.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/over-100-000-syrian-refugees-lebanon-now-unhcr-102637409.html

mendenhall demarcus cousins savannah brinson mount rainier capital one bowl winter classic 2012 georgia bulldogs football

Nokia launches budget Lumia 510: Windows Phone 7.5, 4-inch display and 5-megapixel camera (video)

Nokia launches budget Lumia 510 Windows Phone 75, 4inch display and 5megapixel camera

Confirming all those rumors we've been hearing, Nokia has officially taken the wraps off its latest budget smartphone, the Lumia 510 -- slotting it somewhere between the Asha range and the Lumia 610. With the notable exception of the 4-inch (480 x 800) screen, which is a tad larger than its slightly more accomplished Windows Phone sibling, the other specs are very much in line with its low-cost stance: there's a single 5-megapixel shooter at the back (no front-facer), a lowly 800MHz Qualcomm processor, 256MB RAM and 4GB of non-expandable storage. We'll be bringing you further details as the story unfolds. In terms of the OS, it'll ship with WP Mango but we're told it will be upgraded to Windows Phone 7.8 at some point in the future.

Continue reading Nokia launches budget Lumia 510: Windows Phone 7.5, 4-inch display and 5-megapixel camera (video)

Filed under: ,

Nokia launches budget Lumia 510: Windows Phone 7.5, 4-inch display and 5-megapixel camera (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Oct 2012 02:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/23/nokia-launches-budget-lumia-510/

eric johnson big east tournament ashley olsen new apple tv sun flare love hewitt new ipad

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Who Is in Charge of Language? - Daily Writing Tips

by Mark Nichol

Who invented the English language, and to which mental institution was that person thereafter committed (or from which did the culprit escape)? More to the point, who regulates language, and why, as demonstrated in any one of countless exhibits of spoken and written discourse, are they doing such as poor job of it?

How do we, as a culture with a common predominant language, decide what is correct English, whether spoken or written? The corpus, or body, of our language is determined by a precarious consensus based on the contributions of prescriptivist linguists and descriptivist lexicographers, the traditions and innovations of professional writers, and the speaking and writing habits of the general populace. And it is the tension between all those participants in the process that makes pinning the language down such a challenge.

Dictionary editors are inclined to merely reflect popular usage, with often tentative judgments about which words are standard and which are unfortunate variants that they must duly record as being in use but cannot in good conscience recommend be used.

Meanwhile, other language experts write journal articles and deliver papers about what is and what should be ? or what is and should be allowed. Writing guides range in tone from stuffy to breezy, from sober to silly, but many writers, including some who are paid to write, don?t bother consulting dictionaries, much less handbooks about proper grammar and usage (or journal articles or academic symposia).

People often write comments or e-mail messages to this site in which they rationalize some aberration of grammar, usage, style, spelling, or punctuation they prefer to the one they decry as the ?correct? one. Meanwhile, many self-publishers, both online and in print, do more or less as they please when they write. In both cases, that is their prerogative.

But there is another realm, one admittedly nearly as chaotic, in which there is some effort to maintain standards for written expression. Some publications strive for more rigor than others, and some are more successful at achieving their goals than others, but most adhere to a published style guide such as The Chicago Manual of Style or the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association or The Associated Press Stylebook and/or an internal resource, and expect all contributors, from the most celebrated celebrity author to the newest neophyte, to do so.

Just as students are free to complete a school assignment in any manner they wish ? with attendant consequences ? writers may determine their own course in composition, but if they wish their work to be accepted for mainstream publication, they must go with the flow, however imperfect or illogical it may seem.

Technology enables us to reject this path with increasing ease and seek our own (though many self-publishers are still orthodox about orthography), but when I contemplate this course, two of my favorite bumper sticker bon mots come to mind: ?Don?t believe everything you think? and ?Just because you can doesn?t mean you should.?

Join Over 50,000 Email Subscribers and Get a Free eBook!

  • Subscribe to DailyWritingTips.com via email and you'll be able to download our ebook, "Basic English Grammar."
  • You will also get all our writing tips delivered to your email inbox, completely free!
  • The download link will go along with the first email (you might need to wait up to 24 hours).

Source: http://www.dailywritingtips.com/who-is-in-charge-of-language/

megyn kelly richard hamilton richard hamilton howard stern americas got talent china aircraft carrier barbara walters most fascinating person 2011 golden globe nominations

Why 10 percent unemployment and worse is our future, unless we ...

People waiting in line for unemployment relief in Chicago in October 1960. Photo by Myron Davis for LIFE Magazine

In the next 20 years, the United States and the broader global economy will either dramatically rethink its employment structure or a history-altering societal change will take place.

Of course, unemployment numbers are gamed by those who give up on looking for jobs, but the idea here is that it?s hard to understand why anyone seems to think that the overall employment numbers for our country will trend anywhere but upward.

Let me be clear, this is armchair commentary from someone with absolutely no background in economics or geopolitical, socioeconomic trends, so I am writing this hoping for outside insight because I can?t figure this out.

Below, I (a) outline the problem as I see it, (b) look at big economic drivers that seem to be chances for more problems, (c) list all the opportunities I understand that could reverse somewhat this trend and then (d) highlight some of the transformational changes that could lie in wait for the next generation, before offering some more reading and then waiting to get yelled at in the comments.

A. THE PROBLEM

First, some figures floating around in my head recently:

  • The U.S. had fewer overall jobs in 2010 than in 2000, some 134 million* ? the first decade loss in net employment in recorded U.S. history, which, admittedly, starts just in 1940. A lot of factors go into this total, not the least of which is comparing seasonal and degrees of part-time, but even the most optimistic accounts suggest that if the 2000s saw even seven million new jobs, that was far behind the projected 22 million.
  • The longterm unemployed and so-called ?Lost Generation? are creating a new underclass ? The pipeline of our country?s future leaders are rethinking their options: from entrepreneurship to job-hopping. But many other young people are now chronically underemployed and in debt.
  • Higher structural unemployment is here to stay ? Where economists once pegged 5 percent as the figure, some analysts are suggesting 6-7 percent could be a more attainable goal and others say we could see 10 percent again and learn to accept it [Watch below], particularly considering how employment numbers can be spun. We have a very large, diverse population, but it?s worth noting that there are exceptions with far lower unemployment rates (and better education systems).
  • Innovation and businesses of today seem to be more adept at efficiencies that reduce overall jobs ? I struggled to find a more comprehensive look at web-driven job growth in the last 20 years, but I?d guess that the big drivers of IT jobs of today have erased more jobs than they?ve created (have firms like Google, Amazon and their peers made other industries less relevant because of their services?) And, yes, even if the manufacturing businesses in the U.S. aren?t leaving at the same rate as recent, more painful decades, they are becoming more and more efficient (meaning, they need fewer employees to do more work).
  • Meaningful U.S. innovation has all but stalled ? Meaning new technologies and the job growth that follows has slowed, which means white-collar technology jobs could leave the country, just like low-paying manufacturing jobs have.
  • Income inequality is growing ? As you might expect when economic growth is stalled and technologies create fewer, better-paying jobs and opportunities at wealth creation.
  • Competition for job growth is murkier in a more globalized world ? As the international market continues to develop its interconnectedness, the idea of one city (Philadelphia), or one state (Pennsylvania), or one country (the United States) or even one part of the world (developed countries) luring jobs from elsewhere or fast out-pacing other places in opportunities looks less a success than in generations passed.
  • More and more, the jobs we do create don?t actually matter ? We aren?t solving problems (policemen, firemen and doctors, who keep us safe, or machinists and construction workers, who build things), but creating an increasingly ethereal world. If humanity is wiped out and the electricity shuts down all of our servers, where will our legacy be?
  • Humans are living longer (at least educated ones) and efficiencies are reducing the number of jobs ? If there?s more of us, living longer and fewer (if better-paying, more skilled) overall jobs, doesn?t that centrally look like a scarce place for micro financial security?

Let me say again: I have no education in this space, so I am seeking clarification for how this all doesn?t result in an overall trend of unemployment rising. Help me in the comments and tell me what I?m missing ? as I continue to suss things out below.

Expedited by the financial crisis, a portion of the developed world seems to be facing a scary reality. What if this economic shock isn?t just a recession, it?s a warning sign.

Though few developed countries are as hard hit as 25 percent unemployment in Greece, it seems to me that the biggest reason why we don?t talk more openly about this madness (and why both presidential nominees talk like they can actually solve this problem, and boast about it) is because BRIC nations are still driving through something of their jobs-heavy industrialization.

How could we entirely rethink our economy ? job-sharing, fewer hours or service banking, as listed below ? when our ?competition? for economic hegemony is surging up the traditional understood pathway?

It?s like environmental concerns in China, where the developed world (which already went through industrialization) wants the country to be more green-conscious, but China doesn?t want to miss out on the shortcuts the West got. Their industrialization will keep Apple manufacturing jobs from ever coming back to U.S. soil, but whatever happens to our workforce here in coming years will follow to Asia, so China, too, is surely interested (China, for example, is also trying to look more like an American consumer-focused culture).

Whatever the case, for at least the next two years, we will likely see economic and jobs growth that will simply be bringing us back to where we might be if the Great Recession hadn?t frightened the world into hiding.

B. CULTURAL CHALLENGES

So, in a down economy, with unemployment still high in the United States, we are on the hunt for what can grow job opportunities, but I?m fearful. Here are some possible economic game-changers that, in the end, might seemingly result in fewer net jobs (the common theme being that they, as the market wants to do, created efficiencies in labor):

  • World Wide Web ? History?s most powerful communications platform has fueled new industries, but if someone could more broadly envision the impact of this remarkable tool of efficiency, it?s hard to understand a net gain, or at least as large a one as we sometimes suggest. As early as 2009, we were touting that the Internet had directly created 1.2 million U.S. jobs, helped stimulate at least double that number and fueled some $175 billion in new spending or maybe it?s $300 billion. As I read some of these studies and the coverage of them, consistently the reference to this possibility is through efficiency, which, among other things, certainly means the reduction of redundant or otherwise unnecessary jobs. So, I read those numbers to be a transfer of wealth (i.e. Google makes money in more efficient online advertising, which knocks out more profitable print advertising). The argument here may be that the Internet has created so much access to opportunity, that globally it will be seen as a growth engine. Still, it?s something I find unsettling.
  • Travel and transport ? In his compelling indictment of the failure of our country?s innovation pipeline, Peter Thiel points out that we have stopped moving faster: from trains to cars to planes, but now a stalled high-speed rail network. (He also contrasts progress like our first black president with progress like new industries, like cheap solar technology.) There is innovation to be had there, but might efficiencies follow and hurt in other, unforeseen ways?
  • Consumer culture ? Any big movement our country has in employment is in service-sector retail jobs, but that?s slowing. And, still, I think about how little of that process is automated ? grocery store self-checkout, inventory management and the push to ecommerce and online shopping ? I fear that that?s a segment of the economy that will have its own slashing in the near future.
  • Military and prison industrial complexes ? U.S. military spending is getting trimmed by billions of dollars (though there is political disagreement there), which is meaning fewer jobs, and there is regular shock at the spiraling size of the American incarceration system ($74 billion in annual spending and 800,000 jobs). These are enormous corners of employment there that are due for longterm cutbacks.
  • New urbanism is shrinking sprawl ? Instead of the growth of suburbs that dominated the 20th century in the U.S., people are trending back to the cities now and leaving those suburbs. And while U.S. cities can still be a place of new construction (which accounts for GDP, unlike selling existing homes), I am still stunned by how integral construction and new homes-building is to our economy, considering the backlog of housing stock.

The concept that we have seen the End of Average for hiring is a compelling one, something that I might take further by expecting to see played out by bringing entrepreneurship into the fold as a natural progression for young people. You finish college or a graduate degree, and then go into business by yourself, doing whatever it is you want to do ? accounting, blogging, video production, robotics ? before being hired by way of acquisition. It is the ultimate job interview.

Which is fine, but, unless we?re suggesting that there will be real losers in that option (if you aren?t the best at creating the job you want, you fall through the cracks) then we still need job growth for these people to eventually take on.

C. SMATTERING OF SOLUTIONS

What are some possible sources of buoyancy for the U.S. economy?

  • A weaker U.S. dollar can be a boon for American manufacturing, in industries like automobiles and heavy machinery. That alone may only be enough to stem the loss, as the U.S. business of making things continues to be hurt.
  • Surging consumerism in developing countries creates and distributes wealth ? Right now, less than a third of the Chinese economy is built on spending, if that spendthrift society would more frequently spend out that money (in the U.S. that total is closer to 70 percent), might it flood the world with new job opportunities (making stuff that the Chinese want to buy, like web-based products that can be created here)?
  • China and countries in the Middle East will develop reputations as hubs of immigration, as jobs draw people there. There is a loss of vulnerable, job-seekers from here, forcing a transformation of what the United States is. This includes a massive rethinking of immigration policy.
  • Massive government-backed infrastructure spending ? Trillions on the elusive high-speed rail, mass transit and urban housing, energy innovation and, though it might sensibly result in an even larger, older population, science and healthcare innovation.
  • Green technology ? If the world over begins to embrace cheap solar energy and new energy creation (in addition to a varied energy policy), thousands of jobs could be created, though we?ve struggled to capitalize on this promise before.
  • Skills-based learning works itself out and we retain jobs here ? As a country (and increasingly as a global community), we face the stark skills mismatch more systemically: finding pathways to, say, take people from an over-burdened construction industry and move them to healthcare. This is getting more and more challenging as our positions become more specialized. And we?re really bad at this, though we?re trying to rethink education reform.
  • The U.S. maintains a strong hold of large business that further create efficiencies but employ many people ? Yes, for all the political bluster about small businesses (while they do create a lot of jobs, they also destroy a lot of jobs by failing often), lots of academic studies show that the world?s strongest economies have the largest share of large employers, which create efficiencies and accelerate innovation. Instead, we should focus on making it easier and easier to create businesses and have them flourish, hoping they?ll grow to a scale and size that impacts employment.
  • Legal drug economy: In the next 10 years, a serious, mainstream case for legalizing marijuana and/or related narcotics will be made an increasing number of states leading to a new growth sector for employment, and creating taxable income.
  • Military industry complex: Though, as stated above, the federal government is shrinking its defense spending, another military build-up or greater weapons manufacturing could sustain some corners of employment. Though, World War III would probably end the world, the Cold War (and its end) was good for business.
  • Exporting efficiency ? As the rest of the world mechanizes, could the U.S. export its automated manufacturing base to the rest of the world?
  • Someone smart comes along and save us ? As I?ve written before, our surging population has always been a defense, out of which an innovative thinker comes along to, say, increase food production or create prosperity (and therefore consumers) out of previously impoverished communities. In the middle of the last century, there was fear that a population boom would mean mass starvation by today. Of course, advances in farming and science have kept the production of food mostly caught up with population ? in fact, politics starves more people than overpopulation. So, the other side of this doomsday jobs conversation is that someone or something starting soon will shift this entire conversation.

There is some real promise in there, but what may be most frightening is that we are not done automating and creating efficiencies in the labor force. Not globally, and not in this country.

  1. In just the last decade, a third of all remaining U.S. manufacturing jobs were replaced or lost abroad, according to a sprawling Planet Money podcast from December.
  2. According to projections from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in the next six years, we?ll see the creation of fewer than 400,000 net retail jobs ? the attainable, working class jobs of a consumer economy that follows a manufacturing one (that followed an industrial one) ? and I wonder if that fully takes into account all the automation that isn?t even fully in place. Considering that retail and service accounts for nearly one in five jobs in the United States, there should be some fear there.
  3. Even white collar jobs are still being lost due to efficiencies and more are sure to follow.

To put that on a more local scale from the not-so-distant past, the riverwards section of Philadelphia alone lost more than 300,000 manufacturing jobs from the 1950s to 1980s, so while the technology business conversation locally is an interesting one, these small job-additions just cannot keep up.

D. DRAMATIC MAKEOVERS

If all else slows or fails, how could the economy dramatically shift (something I shared as a key for Philadelphia to remain innovative)?

  • Job sharing ? In which more of us share more, smaller ?mini jobs,? like here.
  • Trading in services ? The oldest of economies, the barter economy like here.
  • Reduced work week ? Trade unions once fought for 40-hour work weeks and for generations, thinkers have predicted the time of no or far reduced work weeks. Suppose we rolled back efficiencies, with the above two in mind.
  • Focus on solving problems ? Social entrepreneurship could infuse what we do with a patronage and support network, as the businesses we grow do the work of bringing everyone up, but that sounds a lot like it would need rethinking of how the entire world goes round.
  • Mandatory retirement ages ? And make them a lot younger, though a balance with government support would have to be better understood.
  • Broadly rethinking capitalism ? I?m not one of *those guys,* but there is an interesting argument that capitalism was a powerful tool but that its race for efficiencies eventually unravels its effectiveness. So it?s time to talk about what?s next.

A few big trend stories on this that are absolutely worth reading:

So how did I get this wrong? Why aren?t we doomed for increasingly unemployment?

Number of Views:173

Source: http://christopherwink.com/2012/10/22/why-10-percent-unemployment-and-worse-is-our-future-unless-we-rethink-our-economy/

johnny knox johnny knox bonjovi bonjovi antonio brown martial law is jon bon jovi dead

Monday, October 22, 2012

National health officer to focus on improving outcomes for children

National health officer to focus on improving outcomes for children [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Debbie Jacobson
djacobson@aap.org
847-434-7084
American Academy of Pediatrics

Patrick Conway, MD, FAAP, Chief Medical Officer, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

NEW ORLEANS In an address at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference & Exhibition in New Orleans, Patrick Conway, MD, FAAP, chief medical officer for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), will discuss how quality improvement programs in all 50 states are committed to providing children with better health security through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) by expanding health care coverage at a lower cost.

Through the ACA, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) provide health coverage to nearly 60 million Americans. CHIP provides health coverage to almost 8 million children in families who seek to provide safe, efficient, high-quality medical care.

Dr. Conway, who is also director of the CMS Office of Clinical Standards and Quality, will also discuss how accountable care organizations and pediatric hospitalists work together to make health care safer and more effective for hospitalized children. Dr. Conway's presentation will be from 10 to 11 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, at the Section on Hospital Medicine Program in the New Orleans Convention Center, Room 281-282.

The CMS is responsible for all quality measures, value-based purchasing programs, quality improvement programs, clinical standards and survey and certification of Medicare and Medicaid health care providers across the nation.

"We are launching a number of programs designed to pay for quality and value instead of volume," said Dr. Conway. "Pediatricians have an opportunity to lead medical homes, quality improvement initiatives, and systems accountable for better health outcomes for children. Investment in child health can reap long-term benefits."

Dr. Conway joined CMS from the Cincinnati Children's Hospital, where he led over 20 faculty and 30 staff in its clinical, education, and research mission focused on improving health outcomes. He served as director of hospital medicine and an associate professor at the hospital as well as a vice president, leading the hospital's outcomes performance efforts, and director of rapid evidence adoption in the James M. Anderson Center.

In past roles, Dr. Conway has advised the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as a White House policy fellow. He also served as executive director of the Federal Coordinating Council on Comparative Effectiveness Research, during which time he helped oversee the $1.1 billion effort for improving clinical research focused on patient outcomes, as mandated by the Recovery Act.

Dr. Conway has published his work in journals such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, New England Journal of Medicine, Health Affairs, and Pediatrics. He is a practicing pediatric hospitalist, completed his pediatrics residency at Children's Hospital Boston, and graduated from Baylor College of Medicine. He also holds a Master's of Science degree in health services research and clinical epidemiology from the University of Pennsylvania and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

###

The American Academy of Pediatrics is an organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well-being of infants, children, adolescents and young adults. For more information, visit www.aap.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


National health officer to focus on improving outcomes for children [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 21-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Debbie Jacobson
djacobson@aap.org
847-434-7084
American Academy of Pediatrics

Patrick Conway, MD, FAAP, Chief Medical Officer, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

NEW ORLEANS In an address at the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) National Conference & Exhibition in New Orleans, Patrick Conway, MD, FAAP, chief medical officer for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), will discuss how quality improvement programs in all 50 states are committed to providing children with better health security through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) by expanding health care coverage at a lower cost.

Through the ACA, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) provide health coverage to nearly 60 million Americans. CHIP provides health coverage to almost 8 million children in families who seek to provide safe, efficient, high-quality medical care.

Dr. Conway, who is also director of the CMS Office of Clinical Standards and Quality, will also discuss how accountable care organizations and pediatric hospitalists work together to make health care safer and more effective for hospitalized children. Dr. Conway's presentation will be from 10 to 11 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, at the Section on Hospital Medicine Program in the New Orleans Convention Center, Room 281-282.

The CMS is responsible for all quality measures, value-based purchasing programs, quality improvement programs, clinical standards and survey and certification of Medicare and Medicaid health care providers across the nation.

"We are launching a number of programs designed to pay for quality and value instead of volume," said Dr. Conway. "Pediatricians have an opportunity to lead medical homes, quality improvement initiatives, and systems accountable for better health outcomes for children. Investment in child health can reap long-term benefits."

Dr. Conway joined CMS from the Cincinnati Children's Hospital, where he led over 20 faculty and 30 staff in its clinical, education, and research mission focused on improving health outcomes. He served as director of hospital medicine and an associate professor at the hospital as well as a vice president, leading the hospital's outcomes performance efforts, and director of rapid evidence adoption in the James M. Anderson Center.

In past roles, Dr. Conway has advised the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as a White House policy fellow. He also served as executive director of the Federal Coordinating Council on Comparative Effectiveness Research, during which time he helped oversee the $1.1 billion effort for improving clinical research focused on patient outcomes, as mandated by the Recovery Act.

Dr. Conway has published his work in journals such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, New England Journal of Medicine, Health Affairs, and Pediatrics. He is a practicing pediatric hospitalist, completed his pediatrics residency at Children's Hospital Boston, and graduated from Baylor College of Medicine. He also holds a Master's of Science degree in health services research and clinical epidemiology from the University of Pennsylvania and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

###

The American Academy of Pediatrics is an organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists dedicated to the health, safety and well-being of infants, children, adolescents and young adults. For more information, visit www.aap.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/aaop-nho101312.php

mary j blige burger king islands joe flacco 2013 nissan altima masters par 3 contest google augmented reality glasses wonderlic test