Thursday, October 17, 2013

Ohio bill would compensate women held captive by Ariel Castro


By Kim Palmer


CLEVELAND (Reuters) - A bill that would compensate three women held captive for nearly a decade in Ariel Castro's home in Cleveland came one step closer to becoming law on Wednesday.


The measure was introduced a month after Michelle Knight, Gina DeJesus, Amanda Berry and a six-year-old daughter Castro fathered with Berry made their way to freedom in May from the home where the women were imprisoned, raped and beaten. It would provide each of the women with $25,000 annually for each year they suffered in Castro's home.


On Wednesday, the bi-partisan House Bill 197 or the Survivors Abduction Act passed its committee vote with three dissenting votes from Republicans on the committee. It will now be considered by the full Ohio House of Representatives.


If the bill becomes law, Knight would get $275,000 for her 11 years of captivity, Berry $250,000 for her 10 years of imprisonment and DeJesus $225,000. The money would come from the Ohio Court of Claims' crime victims fund.


In addition, the law would require Cleveland State University to provide five years schooling plus room and board, all free of charge. They would also receive Medicaid funds for life at the discretion of the Governor.


Separately, a fund soliciting private donations that was set up after the captives were freed has reached $1.4 million from more than 10,000 donors.


Castro, 53, was found dead in his prison cell one month after he was sentenced to life in prison without parole plus 1,000 years for kidnapping, raping and beating the women.


An autopsy report released last week called his death a suicide but a prison report the same week questioned whether Castro, who was found with his pants and underwear around his ankles, had not accidentally killed himself during an act of auto-erotic asphyxiation.


The bill's co-sponsor Cheryl Grossman, a Republican from Grove City near Columbus, told Reuters that the bill applies only to survivors held for eight years or more.


The Ohio Victims of Crime fund carries a balance of $26 million dollars on average and is funded by OVI reinstatement and court fees and a federal victims compensation program, Grossman said.


Co-sponsor John Barnes Jr., a Democrat from Cleveland, represents a district east of the Castro home and introduced the bill in June.


"I was outraged and thought of what, if anything, can be done to help these women on their long road of recovery," Barnes told Reuters.


Sponsors of the bill hope to rename it the Michelle Knight, Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus Survivors of Abduction Act after it passes both legislative houses.


(Editing by Barbara Goldberg, David Bailey and Ken Wills)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ohio-bill-compensate-women-held-captive-ariel-castro-023341391.html
Similar Articles: What Time Does Ios 7 Come Out   lindsay lohan   david ortiz   cedar point   Royal Baby Watch  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Hillary Clinton Accepts First Founder's Award at Elton John AIDS Benefit



Carlo Allegri/Invision/AP


Hillary Clinton at Tuesday night's event



Hillary Clinton accepted the Elton John AIDS Foundation's first-ever Founder's Award at the organization's annual benefit in New York on Tuesday night.



Although she was honored by the accolade, Clinton echoed a theme expressed by many of the stars in attendance: that there's much more work to be done to combat the disease.


PHOTOS: Hillary Clinton, Ron Perelman Honored at 2013 Elton John AIDS Foundation Benefit


"We still have so far to go," the former secretary of state said in her acceptance speech. "There are so many challenges that confront us. If we are to continue to build on the progress, and yes, there has been progress, then we have to continue to advocate and demand for governments, international organizations, foundations, all of us, to be persistent…and ensure that we don't falter."


"If we're going to beat AIDS, we have to reach out to everyone," she added.


Elton John also received an award at Tuesday's gala, from the Harvard AIDS Initiative.


"I really hope that all of you will join me in being equally stubborn when it comes to ending AIDS because that is what will be required to end this epidemic," he told the well-heeled crowd at Cipriani Wall Street in lower Manhattan. "We're going to have to stubbornly insist on full funding for all proven methods of preventing HIV infection…Treatment for everyone. Treatment for all…We're going to have to keep yelling and screaming about the way our country treats racial and sexual minorities and, of course, the poor. We're going to have to be downright stubborn, not just this year, not next year, not the next, but for many years to come."


Indeed, John vowed to be stubborn about AIDS for the next 20 years if necessary, but he said he doesn't think it will take that long to achieve an AIDS-free generation and world.


Nevertheless, John added, "We have so much more work to do and we'll be there until the bitter end."


STORY: Hillary Clinton to Get Elton John Foundation Honor


Other honorees at the event, which raised $3.45 million, included Food Network star Sandra Lee, John's longtime agent Howard Rose and mogul Ron Perelman, who prompted cheers from the crowd when he referred to Clinton as "the next president of the United States." Clinton looked nonchalant when the camera cut to her, but after Perelman continued to sing her praises and said the highly rumored candidate has his vote, Clinton could be seen mouthing "Oh my God," as if she couldn't believe all of the attention.


Matt Lauer was a last-minute substitute host at the event after Anderson Cooper had to go to Washington to cover the debt-ceiling crisis, which Lauer joked "sounded like a lame-ass excuse."


Earlier, The Hollywood Reporter asked Lauer what the entertainment industry could do to continue to raise awareness of AIDS and combat the disease.


"Talk, talk, talk, spread the word, get out there, come to events like this and raise money," Lauer said. "I mean, when you stop and think about what Elton has done in 20 years…a lot of it is something you can't put a price tag on, it's just a discussion and getting out there and putting his reputation on line and spreading the word that way."


STORY: Elton John to Pen Book on AIDS Epidemic


Tony-winning actress Judith Light echoed Lauer's call for a continued dialogue on the issue.


"We did and we do so much in terms of the awareness, and I don't think it's just the entertainment industry that has to do something, I think it's about those of us who are committed to this issue and have been committed to this issue for a long time, talking to other people and finding ways, just like Elton has, to make it a prominent issue again, to say to people, 'This is not over,' " she said.


The former Who's the Boss star, who's performed on Broadway for the past few years, told us that she recently starred in a pilot for Amazon, making her just the latest actor to join the Internet revolution.


Meanwhile, fellow Broadway alum Jeremy Jordan, who left his starring role in Newsies after he joined the second-season cast of NBC's now-canceled Smash, said he misses the stage and hopes to "come back as soon as possible." In fact, he's doing a weeklong Stephen Sondheim show in November called A Bed and a Chair.


"It's only a week, and it's not Broadway, but it will be nice to come back to New York for a hot sec," he said.


Other celebs in attendance included Billy Joel, Alec Baldwin, Allison Williams, Courtney Love, Lisa Marie Presley and rock band Heart, who performed at the end of the night.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/SA14Hfr146c/story01.htm
Tags: Maria de Villota   snl   nbc news   Arsenio Hall   NSYNC VMA 2013  

Abbott surprises with huge dividend boost, shares jump


By Ransdell Pierson


(Reuters) - Abbott Laboratories reported higher-than-expected quarterly earnings on Wednesday, helped by strong demand for its diagnostics, and surprised investors with a dividend increase of more than 50 percent.


Lower taxes and cost-cutting also helped Abbott beat earnings forecasts, analysts said. The company's shares jumped 5 percent in afternoon trading to $35.42.


"The 57 percent dividend hike is the big news," Jefferies analyst Jeffrey Holford said in a research note. Abbott said it would boost its dividend to 22 cents per share from 14 cents, starting with the February 15 payment.


RBC Capital Markets analyst Glenn Novarro said the dividend's annual yield will grow to 2.7 percent and will likely attract investors following recent declines in Abbott shares related to worries about weakness in its nutritional products business.


"The dividend was a double surprise because of its size and because the company had not signaled they would raise it in the near term," Novarro said.


Abbott, which spun off its branded prescription drugs business in January into a separate publicly traded company called AbbVie Inc, reported third-quarter earnings from continuing operations of $773 million, or 49 cents per share. That compared with $339 million, or 21 cents per share, a year earlier, when Abbott incurred big expenses for cost-reduction programs and other initiatives.


Excluding special items, Abbott earned 55 cents per share. Analysts, on average, had expected 51 cents.


Overall revenue rose 2 percent to $5.37 billion, a bit shy of Wall Street forecasts for $5.39 billion. Sales would have risen 4.3 percent if not for the stronger dollar, which lowers the value of sales in overseas markets.


Despite beating earnings forecasts, Abbott left its full-year profit view unchanged at $1.98 to $2.04 per share, excluding special items.


"They're guiding conservatively given the current general macroeconomic situation," said Edward Jones analyst Jeff Windau, who has a "buy" rating on Abbott shares. "The quarter highlights overall strength of the company, including its strong medical device business and its international presence, including growth in emerging markets."


Sales of nutritional products, including Similac infant formula and Ensure beverages for adults, rose 1.9 percent to $1.64 billion in the third quarter. That represents a slowdown from growth of 7.9 percent in the second quarter.


In August Abbott recalled batches of its milk formula brands in China and Vietnam due to fears that protein concentrate, an ingredient provided by an outside supplier, was contaminated.


Although no contamination was ever found, Abbott on Wednesday said the disruption reduced sales of its nutritional products for infants and children by $90 million in the third quarter. It said sales of the products will continue to be hurt through the first half of 2014.


"But Abbott signaled that the nutritional issues will be short-term and that they are investing there (in Asia) to mitigate them," said Tim Nelson, a healthcare analyst with Nuveen Asset Management.


Sales of Abbott diagnostics rose 8 percent to $1.13 billion, while sales of its medical devices climbed 1.9 percent to $1.34 billion. But sales of its generic prescription drugs, which it calls established pharmaceuticals, fell 2.9 percent to $1.24 billion.


(Reporting by Ransdell Pierson; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and John Wallace)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/abbott-beats-forecasts-helped-cost-cuts-low-taxes-120848451--finance.html
Related Topics: furlough   911   Spring High School   Mary Lambert   Nick Jonas  

How a Lost Boy Used Google Earth to Find His Way Home After 25 Years

Last year, we heard the amazing story of Saroo Brierley, the Indian "lost child" who used Google Earth to find his way home after 25 years. This stirring video produced by Google features Brierley telling the story in his own words. It's pretty crushing.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/dV5a6VGcSD0/how-a-lost-boy-used-google-earth-to-find-his-way-home-a-1446315507
Similar Articles: Valerie Harper   tommy morrison   Ezra Is A   Olivia Nuzzi   National Ice Cream Day  

This Insane Six-Axis 3D Printer Even Works On Curved Surfaces


Still upset about breaking the handle on your favorite mug? A 3D printer can make it as good as new, and thanks to researchers at the University of Southern California, the process is even easier now since they've developed a printer that can build directly on curved surfaces.


The most common 3D printer design on the market has a print head with just three axis of movement, which means the printer and the table have to remain perfectly flat and stable at all times. But with six axis of movement, the print head on this creation works on angled and even curved surfaces, meaning a replacement handle could be printed directly onto a mug.



The catch, of course, is that the printer involves far more components than the models offered by companies like Makerbot, which means they'll be expensive to build and maintain. So if and when they're perfected and made ready for primetime, they'll likely only be affordable to companies in need of rapid prototyping systems, or those who intend to turn an immediate profit. In other words, don't expect Makerbot to release a six-axis model anytime soon. [Fabbaloo via Boing Boing]


This Insane Six-Axis 3D Printer Even Works On Curved Surfaces



Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-insane-six-axis-3d-printer-even-works-on-curved-su-1445522451
Similar Articles: torrie wilson   Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs 2   engadget   Seamus Heaney   phil mickelson  

Voxer Adds A Web Version To Its Push-To-Talk Business Messaging ...


Voxer, the mobile messaging app that started out 2013 with a little notoriety (thanks to Facebook cutting off its API access), is today taking the next step in its transformation into a paid enterprise push-to-talk and chat product: the company is launching Voxer for Web, a version of the service that links up the company’s paid Voxer for Business iOS and Android apps with a desktop version.


Priced as part of the company’s bigger Voxer for Business service — rates for that are currently $4.95/user/month but are going up to $9.95/user/month January 1, 2014 for sign-ups after then — the web version will help Voxer transform from one that can be used as a person-to-person communication system into a more unified product, to also include those who are in a stationary place and need to communicate with many workers at once. Think dispatchers for taxi or other delivery servicees. (As for the price hike, Voxer also says that for those who sign up before the end of December, they will get the lower pricing option applied until October 2014).


Voxer for Web essentially takes several of the features from the company’s existing mobile apps for business users and extends them to desktop computers, with the ability to push live and messaged audio, sending images and text messages and chat. Added features include the ability to have multiple chats open on a single screen; and voice messages, texts and images sent from a whole team. Users can also listen to multiple chats in live mode — similar to what you get in lower-quality existing dispatch services.


Itamar Kandel, COO at Voxer, tells us that the company has gone for a web version in response to requests from businesses. “We’ve heard from customers across a variety of industries that need to enable their mobile workforces and desk workers to collaborate,” he said. “Voxer for Web addresses this by providing a unified experience while also including unique features that will enable administrators and dispatchers to monitor multiple conversations, people or teams – all from a computer.”


He notes that the idea is that this not just signifies an increase in functionality, but also in terms of the kinds of businesses that Voxer is targeting. “Our vision is that mobile will be for the moving workforce, whereas desktop is ideal for businesses that have large workforces that vox and need to communicate quickly with a central person, such as a dispatcher,” he said. “By adding the ability to send messages from a desktop, we have increased our addressable market tenfold, and can now service the communication needs of not just mobile employees but also the needs of the entire organization. Voxer for Web will serve as the connective tissue between the mobile and stationary workforces.”


Voxer’s consumer product — which stands apart from other messaging apps like WhatsApp for being primarily focused on voice-based exchanges — has had tens of millions of downloads, with a particular surge in 2012, the same year it raised a large $30 million round.


The company today is not revealing how many enterprises have signed up to Voxer for Business (we’re asking). It’s unlikely to be a volume play like the consumer product, but it represents a couple of different and important evolutions for the company. The first and most obvious is the startup’s move to targeting a paying audience with its products, and along with that a push to make Voxer into an enterprise-class company, complete with stronger service levels, security and a roll-out of features that are needed and demanded by those paying customers.


The second is how Voxer has become, yes, one of the many to tap into the bigger consumerization trend, taking a product originally created for average consumers and applying it to the enterprise market — but it is one with a twist. Voxer is also a sign of how in fact even consumer products can come out of enterprise beginnings: founder Tom Katis apparently first came up with the idea out of his own experiences as a communications specialist with the military in Afghanistan.


In making the switch to business users, Voxer is not exactly entering unchartered territory. It competes against those services also with origins in consumer apps from the likes of Sprint, with its Nextel push-to-talk service.


Perhaps more importantly for Voxer, there are a number of other messaging services and dispatch messaging services that are specifically aiming at the same market it is. Take taxi services, one of Voxer’s key targets. (In a press release announcing the new web version, it quotes Tom Brennan, owner of Future Cab: “Voxer has played a central role in my company, allowing my team to constantly be in touch with each other and with me.” He lives in Virginia Beach and operates a service in New York from there, apparently.) There are dozens of companies out there already, some working on legacy systems that require special in-car equipment; but many more riding on the explosion of mobile networks and mobile handsets to run services. Competitors include T Dispatch and PC Dispatch (which I’m guessing are close rivals), Digital Dispatch, TaxiCaller, AutoCab and many more.


Whether Voxer’s additional functionality, letting users send pictures and more, its strong brand recognition on the consumer side, and Katis’ connections to VC money and subsequent networks, will be enough to set it apart and win new customers, will be worth watching.


Voxer has raised some $30 million to date with backers including Institutional Venture Partners, Intel Capital, SV Angel, TC-founder Michael Arrington’s CrunchFund, Chris Dixon, Roger McNamee, Windcrest Partners and Webb Investment Network.





Source: http://techcrunch.com/2013/10/14/voxer-adds-a-web-version-to-its-push-to-talk-business-messaging-app/
Category: affordable care act   Theresa Vail   Amanda Berry  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Solar Decathlon's Latest Designs for Affordable ... - AOL Real Estate

By


CNBC
 

| Posted Oct 15th 2013 10:13AM



Updated Oct 15th 2013 12:01PM







2013 solar decathlon irvine calif

Department of Energy/Flickr


By Diana Olick

Nineteen collegiate teams are in a tough competition to see who can design, build and operate the most energy efficient and affordable home of the future. From solar technology, to sustainable building materials, to futuristic heating and cooling systems, these teams are using the latest innovations from companies across the globe, while pushing the envelope of energy efficiency with their own new ideas. The homes are fully built and decorated, and the student teams are performing all kinds of tasks within the homes, from washing clothes to boiling water; whichever team does it all best wins.

The competition, which is called the Solar Decathlon, started in 2002, occurring biannually in Washington, D.C. This year, the Department of Energy-sponsored event moved to Irvine, Calif., to bring its homes to a wider audience. Irvine is the perfect place, as new construction is booming again after a lull during the housing recession. A big emphasis in this year's competition is affordability.

The homebuilders are watching, especially Lennar, which has a major development going on near the site of this year's competition. Lennar is building homes with solar standard.
Below are some highlights of this year's decathlon.

SOLAR DECATHLON HOMES:


  • House: Delta T-90



    Cost: $168,385



    Team website: nusd2013.org



    The Delta T-90 house was built at the Huntington Homes factory in Vermont. Norwich University is the first team in the history of the decathlon to partner with a home builder, which means in the future the homes could be made commercially available.



    The DOE judges estimate this home would cost $168,385. Along with two others, the Delta T-90 is a winner in the competition's affordability category.



    The house uses the "Big Ass Fans" brand and a smart e-monitor system, allowing homeowners to stay informed about their home's power usage and production.



    The "Big Ass Fan" helps maintain a comfortable 70-degree temperature inside when the outside temperature is below 20 degrees.



    Five teams competing in the decathlon use the "Big Ass Fans" brand.



    Norwich University

  • House: Start.Home

    Cost: $234,092

    Team website: solardecathlon.stanford.edu

    The Start.home is built around a core: like the engine of car, it runs the home. Designed to be low cost and efficient, the core can be shipped to home builders as a self-contained unit, so they can build their own custom home around it.

    The house features energy efficient appliances from General Electric and the roof is lined with energy efficient ceiling material developed by DuPont. Homeowners can control and monitor energy consumption using an Apple iPad.

    Stanford students also developed a proprietary track pad "home switch," to control electrical outlets and lights with the swipe of a finger.


    Stanford University

  • House: DALE

    Cost: $274,263

    Team website: meetdale.com

    The Southern California Institute of Architecture and the California Institute of Technology came together to create the DALE house, which splits in half to triple its living area.

    Sliding on rails like train tracks, the house expands from 600 to 18,000 square feet, opening up to make the most of California's sunny climate.

    Inside the home, the walls move to maximize or minimize different living areas, depending on what the homeowner is doing.


    SCI-Arc and Caltech

  • House: UrbanEden

    Cost: $350,686

    Team website: urbaneden.uncc.edu

    The cement used by UNC-Charlotte to make this house is generating a lot of buzz. The geopolymer cement concrete is made up of fly ash, which is a waste byproduct of coal-burning power plants.

    This entirely new type of cement is far more environmentally friendly than traditional Portland cement, which contributes 5 percent to 8 percent of worldwide carbon dioxide emissions. The team behind this home estimates their new cement reduces the home's carbon footprint by 90 percent.

    The other unique feature of this home is its use of outdoor space. The walls move to turn the living room into a bedroom and transform the outdoor deck into a living area.

    The deck is lined with plants—a different variety for each room: Outside the living room are flowers, by the kitchen are edibles and alongside the bedroom are thicker varieties for more privacy.


    The University of North Carolina at Charlotte

  • Home: Harvest

    Cost: $280,952

    Team website: www.teamcapitoldc.org

    The Catholic University of America, George Washington University and American University joined forces as Team Capitol DC to build this home, which features sliding blinds along the front. Strips of metal called "lulvers" adjust, opening or closing to maximize energy from the sun's rays.

    Each blind has a Flexinol wire built in, a heat-sensitive black wire which expands or contracts to open or close the blinds automatically at certain temperatures. Right now the system is set to close the blinds at a comfortable room temperature of 75 to 85 degrees.

    Like all the homes here, The Harvest House is entirely solar powered with energy efficient appliances and a small physical footprint.


    Team Capitol DC

  • House: The Phoenix



    Cost: $248,423



    Team website: sd2013.teamkentuckiana.org



    Team Kentuckiana—the University of Louisville, Ball State University and University of Kentucky—designed the Phoenix House with victims of natural disasters in mind. It is constructed with a roof that easily pops back into shape after it is demolished.



    The bathroom doubles as a safe room for a homeowner to take shelter, with a strong metal outside door and shatter-proof window.



    In the kitchen, the table collapses down and in the bedrooms, like many of these energy-efficient homes, Murphy beds maximize space and minimize energy needs.



    For a complete list of all the Solar Decathlon Teams competing this year, click here.



    Team Kentuckiana

More from CNBC:
10 Poorest States in America
10 Richest States in America
Secret Towns of the Super Rich
Battle of the Smart Homes

More on AOL Real Estate:
Find out how to calculate mortgage payments.
Find
homes for sale in your area.
Find
foreclosures in your area.

Find homes for rent.

Follow us on Twitter at @AOLRealEstate or connect with AOL Real Estate on Facebook.




Source: http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2013/10/15/2013-solar-decathlons-latest-designs/
Category: eric decker   Phillip Lim Target   PS4 release date   tony stewart   National Tequila Day  

Book News: Oscar Hijuelos Remembered As 'A Cultural Pioneer'


The daily lowdown on books, publishing, and the occasional author behaving badly.





Pulitzer Prize-winning author Oscar Hijuelos attends the Hispanic Organization of Latin Actors) Awards in 2003 in New York City.



Myrna Suarez/Getty Images


Pulitzer Prize-winning author Oscar Hijuelos attends the Hispanic Organization of Latin Actors) Awards in 2003 in New York City.


Myrna Suarez/Getty Images


  • Novelist Oscar Hijuelos, whose book The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love made him the first Latino author to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, died on Saturday at age 62. NPR's David Greene interviewed Hijuelos' friend Gustavo Perez Firmat, a Columbia professor who said Hijuelos made Americans realize that there is a "rich and diverse body of writing being done by young Latinos in this country," noting that it "helped to open doors with both publishers and readers to other Latino writers." Hector Tobar of the Los Angeles Times wrote that Hijuelos was "a cultural pioneer who wrote elegant novels about ambitious Cuban expatriates and music-loving New Yorkers." Tobar added, "He told stories that revealed the texture and passion of the Latino immigrant experience to legions of non-Latino readers for the first time."

  • With the announcement of the prestigious Man Booker Prize looming, The Guardian announced the winner of its aptly-named annual contest, the Not the Booker Prize. This year, Life After Life, a novel from the "tremendously talented writer" Kate Atkinson took the award.

  • The poet, professor and critic James Emanuel died Sept. 28 at age 92, The New York Times reports. His poems often deal with racism in America. One, "Deadly James (For All the Victims of Police Brutality)," was written after his son, who Emanuel said was a victim of police brutality, committed suicide. In September, Emanuel spoke to NPR's Eleanor Beardsley about moving to Paris to escape racial discrimination in the U.S.: "It's the tragedy that I never can talk about. It was too evil, too vicious. And any country that would tolerate it is a country I can't put my foot in." He added, "If America ever solves its racial problem, it will be the greatest country in the world."

  • Carl Bernstein is writing a memoir about his time as a rookie journalist at The Washington Star, the legendary D.C. newspaper that went bankrupt in 1981. The book will be titled The Washington Star and will be published in 2016 by Henry Holt. In a press release, Bernstein wrote ,"My understanding of journalism, and the world I've covered and written about, and the life I've led, crystallized in those five incomparable years at a uniquely great newspaper."

  • The Color Purple author Alice Walker will publish excerpts from her personal diaries as a book, to be called Gathering Blossoms Under Fire. The Simon & Schuster imprint 37 Ink will publish it in 2017. The Associated Press notes that "the 69-year-old Walker has been keeping a diary for half a century, filling dozens of notebooks that track her rise from poverty in Georgia to international fame."

  • Donna Tartt rails against prescriptivism in English in an interview with her editor Michael Pietsch: "English is such a powerful and widely spoken language precisely because it's so flexible, and capacious: a catchall hybrid that absorbs and incorporates everything it comes into contact with. Lexical variety, eccentric constructions and punctuation, variant spellings, archaisms, the ability to pile clause on clause, the effortless incorporation of words from other languages: flexibility, and inclusiveness, is what makes English great; and diversity is what keeps it healthy and growing, exuberantly regenerating itself with rich new forms and usages. Shakespearean words, foreign words, slang and dialect and made-up phrases from kids on the street corner: English has room for them all. And writers — not just literary writers, but popular writers as well — breathe air into English and keep it lively by making it their own, not by adhering to some style manual that gets handed out to college Freshmen in a composition class."

Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/15/234621717/book-news-oscar-hijuelos-remembered-as-a-cultural-pioneer?ft=1&f=1008
Similar Articles: charlie hunnam   Ronan Farrow   eddie aikau   castle   Amanda Berry  

Rights Groups Urge Justice Probe Of 1985 Bombing


WASHINGTON (AP) — Civil rights groups and members of Congress are pressing the Justice Department to renew its investigation of a 1985 office bombing that killed Palestinian-American civil rights leader Alex Odeh and injured seven people.


The American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Jewish Voice for Peace and others have launched a petition campaign asking Justice to further investigate the explosion, which demolished the committee's office in Santa Ana, Calif. The online petition has about 10,000 signatures.


California Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez sent a letter to the department in June and is seeking other lawmakers to sign a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder. The FBI identified suspects after the attack, but none were ever named or indicted.


"Whenever a leader for a civil rights organization is killed, it is the responsibility of our country as a whole— and a civil rights community as a whole— to stand up and demand that their killers be brought to justice and to insure that the U.S. Department of Justice does everything in its power to close the case," NAACP President Ben Jealous told reporters in a conference call Monday.


The DOJ, which has furloughed workers due to the government shutdown, had no immediate comment Monday, which also was the federal Columbus Day holiday. In 2010, the FBI described Odeh's killing in an agency news blog as "an active, ongoing priority investigation" and noted a $1 million reward.


Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., said Monday that he wants the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations to convene a hearing on the bombing.


"We're going to pursue it vigorously and we're not going to let any more time lapse," Conyers said. "We're going to continue to help all of the organizations that are involved build up more and more support for us getting to where we ought to be in terms of a horrific, violent crime that has, I think, been put on the back burner for far too long."


At the time of the attack, the FBI said they believed the bombing was the responsibility of the militant Jewish Defense League. An attorney for the group denied the allegations and asked for a retraction from the agency. The FBI also linked Odeh's killing to two other acts of domestic terrorism in Brentwood, N.Y. and Paterson, N.J. that same year.


Odeh, the West Coast regional director for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, was killed as he opened the door to his office on Oct. 11, 1985. The bombing occurred the morning after Odeh said on a Los Angeles television news broadcast that Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yassir Arafat was a "man of peace" because of his role in securing the release of passengers from the hijacked Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro in Egypt.


Odeh, who came to the U.S. from Palestine, was described by both Jews and Arabs as a nonviolent man who advocated compromise. According to the American-Arab committee, Odeh immigrated to the United States in 1972 and became a U.S. citizen in 1977. He was a poet and lecturer.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234356181&ft=1&f=
Related Topics: Nexus 5   big brother   9/11   taylor swift   Hannah Anderson  

The end of the CIO as we know it -- and IT feels fine


The end of the CIO as we know it -- and IT feels fine

Credit: Daniel Allan



It's a painful irony: As technology permeates the workplace, the CIO is becoming less relevant. I predict the position's stature will further decrease in the coming years for many -- though not all -- companies.


I've been watching CIOs try to reinvent themseves for most of the last decade, and I've heard all sorts of new roles for the CIO proposed: chief innovation officer, chief process officer, chief strategy officer, chief digital officer, chief integration office, even chief information officer (as opposed to chief technology manager, which is what most CIOs actually are). I've watched CIOs chafe about reporting to the CFO a decade ago to seeking a "seat at the table" (meaning being treated like COOs, sales chiefs, and CFOs in CEOs' eyes) half a decade ago to now seeking to be "more strategic."


[ What's driving the consumerization-of-IT trend. | Subscribe to InfoWorld's Consumerization of IT newsletter today. ]


CIOs don't want to be the digital version of the head of facilities or the technology purchasing manager. Instead, they've been trying to find a big role for themselves for much of the last decade. They've failed, and there's a reason for that.


The CIO rose under an extraordinary set of circumstances
The CIO job is about 15 years old, created in the aftermath of the Y2K crisis and the simultaneous rise of both ERP and e-commerce in the late 1990s. Before then, we had MIS (management information system) directors who ran the mainframe-era data centers in large companies. They were specialized departments that had little to do with the rest of the company's routine operations, though they were critical to key functions (usually financial).


The Y2K crisis and the ERP and e-commerce pushes made companies realize that technology was fundamentally important to the entire company and needed an elevated position in the corporate hierarchy to do the equivalent of the Manhattan Project or lunar landing: implement massive information systems that had never existed before. Thus was born the CIO.


By the mid-2000s, though, e-commerce and ERP were deployed at most companies, and Y2K was a distant memory. The CIO role became more about maintaining and operating those systems, and some CIOs began to miss the heady days of figuring out the brave new world. Many more were happy to get back to an operational role, managing IT as they had MIS, though it was now more complex because PCs were on nearly every desk, networks were widespread, and the amount of data to manage was several orders of magnitudes greater than it had been pre-Y2K.


After 9/11, CIOs got a boost to their strategic value due to the focus on security, which many CIOs used as a way to assert control or entrench themselves further, whether strategically or operationally, depending on their ambitions. Security became a convenient way to say no, and the cautionary joke about CIOs and their IT departments being Doctor No became common.


Then the financial meltdown hit, and most companies made their CIOs focus on operational efficiency through cost-cutting and automation. As a result, IT was less able to say yes and simultaneously recast it as an operational sink hole that could always be squeezed further.


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/d/consumerization-of-it/the-end-of-the-cio-we-know-it-and-it-feels-fine-228472?source=rss_infoworld_top_stories_
Similar Articles: christina milian   new england patriots   blue moon   H&m   brandon jennings  

Colts lead Chargers 3-0 on Vinatieri's field goal

SAN DIEGO (AP) — Adam Vinatieri kicked a 30-yard field goal on the game's first possession, and the Indianapolis Colts led the San Diego Chargers 3-0 after one quarter Monday night.


The Colts opened the game with a flea-flicker, with Trent Richardson taking the handoff and tossing the ball back to Andrew Luck, who completed a 35-yard pass to Reggie Wayne. The drive bogged down at the Chargers 11, leading to Vinatieri's field goal.


Philip Rivers' first four passes for San Diego were incomplete. Then he connected with rookie Keenan Allen on a 13-yarder on third-and-15 from the Chargers 33.


The Colts were trying to take a two-game lead in the AFC South.


Colts coach Chuck Pagano is the older brother of Chargers defensive coordinator John Pagano.


The Chargers were without three starters: linebackers Jarret Johnson and Donald Butler, and left guard Chad Rinehart. The Colts were without safety LaRon Landry.


___


AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/colts-lead-chargers-3-0-vinatieris-field-goal-012533305--spt.html
Similar Articles: george strait   Matt Harvey   Juan Pablo   yemen   Jake Peavy  

Monday, October 14, 2013

Demand Media CEO And Co-Founder Rosenblatt Resigns


SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) — Demand Media said Monday that its CEO and chairman, Richard Rosenblatt, will resign from the company he helped found by the end of the month.


The Internet publisher said that co-founder Shawn Colo is the interim president, effective immediately, and will become the temporary CEO when Rosenblatt resigns on Oct. 31. Demand Media will start a search for a permanent CEO soon. James Quandt, a member of Demand Media's board since 2008, will take over as chairman, effective immediately.


The Santa Monica, Calif.-based company did not explain why Rosenblatt was resigning. He has been CEO since the company was founded in 2006.


"I realize that all journeys must ultimately come to an end and want to wish Shawn and the entire team success as they continue to grow the business," Rosenblatt said in a statement.


Demand Media's shares have lost 66 percent of their value since the company went public in January 2011 with an initial public offering price of $17. Analysts expect the company to report a loss this year, after posting a profit last year, according to FactSet.


Demand Media assigns freelancers to produce stories about frequently searched topics online and then sells advertisements alongside the content at its own websites, which include eHow. That business has suffered from changes in Google's search formula that cut the amount of traffic to its websites.


Earlier this year, Demand Media announced it plans to split itself into two publicly traded companies. The company said Monday that it is still committed to that plan. One of the companies will handle the company's how-to articles and the other will offer domain registry services.


Demand Media shares closed unchanged Monday at $5.85.


Source: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=234307903&ft=1&f=
Category: glee   The Family   emily blunt   nbc sports   Iggy Azalea  

Saturday, October 12, 2013

Paint and Lighting: Lowe's Home Improvements DIY Kitchen Project ...

Lowe's Home Improvements


Recently Lowe’s Home Improvement and I partnered together to brighten up my kitchen! This is my second post to tell you about our kitchen DIY project: My work with Lowe’s, painting the kitchen and adding new lighting, and something I’m very excited about, new countertops are on their way!


It makes me giddy and excited for the holidays to come! One thing, in particular, is that I’ll have new WHITE solid surface countertops!


Our friend Jack came to help install, paint, and do some extra jobs around the house. I posted about our shopping experience  at Lowe’s, last week.


Now it’s time to get to work on the house! In comes Jack …


Jack’s not only our retired friend, we find him so enjoyable to be around. We decided after a few days of working and helping us that we’d actually let Jack, and his wife Carol, move in with us! :)


Lowe's Home Improvement


I’ll start with our front door. We painted it an HEIRLOOM RED using Valspar paint. We have our original 1978 front doors, which I believe keeps the integrity of our home, and it was nice to have a touch up. We had red in the past and I wanted red again. A red front door to me makes a statement: WELCOME.


Lowe's Home Improvements


Then we moved into the kitchen for more painting. We used Olympic paint with these colors:


Olympic ONE paint for the kitchen: Weeping Willow C11-3 and Babbling Brook D61-2


Lowe's Home Improvements


Lowe's Home Improvements


Once we get the back splash up and the counters in, I’ll show you the big reveal with the new paint colors!


The next project we worked on was lighting in our home. Up the staircase, and the entry.


Before we changed out the lights.


Lowe's Home Improvements


And after, with 2 beautiful allen + roth® wooden slat pendants in a warm pecan finish, with a fabric shade.


I love the allen + roth® brand, which is sold exclusively at Lowe’s.


Lowe's Home Improvement


Lowe's Home Improvements allen+roth


Lowe's Home Improvements allen+roth


Jack also hung a new pendant light in our dining room. It had been years since we’d repurposed  the old one by spraying it black. It was definitely time for an update!


Lowe's Home Improvement


The quality and style of this pendant tied in nicely with our dining/kitchen area– yellows, browns, and a touch of teal and green.


Lowe's Home Improvements allen+roth


With the existing 3 red pendants in the kitchen, we decided to change up the colors with 3 beautiful teal-ish blue.


Lowe's Home Improvements


Construction is always messy!


Lowe's Home Improvements


Lowe's Home Improvements


Lowe's Home Improvements


Just when we finished the painting, Kevin came from Lowe’s Home Improvements, came to measure for our  new LG HI-MACS Solid WHITE Solid Surface Countertops!


Lowe's Home Improvement


Details to come on the installation. And then soon, the big reveal.


Love the process of making a template for the counters. Perfect idea!


Lowe's Home Improvement


Remember the goal for sprucing up our kitchen and home was to add more light. To brighten things up and to bring clarity and light to a dark space.


That said, I whipped into our local Lowe’s store for all of these products, because the partnership I have with is to “buy in stock.” That made it very simple for me!


I browsed the lighting section only a couple of times, and made my decision. I’m happy to say that our experience with shopping at Lowe’s was very easy and comfortable. And their staff was very knowledgable and had great style tips! The products we’ve decided to use were top notch, with no glitches whatsoever. So sometimes a “quick” shopping experience is much more profitable and time effective, than long drawn-out ones where you can’t decide. Part of not being able to decide I believe has to do with perfectionism and image. We worry too much about what other people will think, how they will judge our home, or “if we made the right decision.”


Easy Decision and Shopping Process:


  • Make your choices.

  • Stick with your gut.

  • Ask 1 friend or professional. Don’t get a zillion other opinions or you’ll be terribly confused.

  • Take samples home and lay them out.

  • Use your a My Lowe’s account for easy planning.

  • Head to the store and ask 1 employee to help you to collect all items.

  • Try to get everything in 1 shopping trip.

  • Make sure they help you out to your car if you need it.

  • Put Lowe’s phone number in your cell, in case you need to call them for help.


Do everything you can to enjoy the experience and remodel process!


Do you have any small home improvements coming up?


Next post: The countertops are here! Installation time, and why we love our new LG HI-MACS Solid Surface countertops.


Today’s post is sponsored by Lowe’s Home Improvement, who provided me with product. As always, all opinions are my own.


Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!


Source: http://reluctantentertainer.com/2013/10/paint-lighting-lowes-home-improvements-diy-kitchen/
Category: today show   houston texans   jets   taylor swift   Iams Recall