Author: Serkadis

  • 1200-1300 Configurable controllers

    Microprocessor controllers, 48×96 (1/8DIN) format for 1200 and 96×96 (1/4DIN) format for 1300, built with SMT technology.
    Complete operator interface, protected by Lexan membrane to guarantee an IP65 faceplate protection level.

    Composed of 4 keys, double 4-digit green LED display, 4 red signal LEDs for the 4 relay/logic outputs and 3 additional LEDs with programmable function to signal the instrument’s various function states.

    The main input for the variable to be controlled is universal, and allows connection of a wide variety of signals: thermocouples, resistance thermometers, thermistors, normalized linear inputs, all with possibility of custom linearization set from the faceplate. Input type is selected entirely from the faceplate and requires no external adapter shunts/dividers.

    A second auxiliary analog input from current transformer is available. You can select one of the two presettable setpoints, select Manual-Automatic mode, reset the alarm memory, or enable the hold function by means of the digital input.
    The instrument provides up to 4 outputs: relay (5A, 250VAC/30VDC cosÆ = 1) or logic (24V ± 10% (10Vmin a 20mA)).

    An analog output in voltage or in current is also available.
    The functions of each output are freely configurable from the faceplate. In addition to the control and alarm outputs, you can also have outputs that repeat the state of the digital or retransmission input by process variable, setpoint, deviation, alarm trip points and values acquired via serial line.

    An additional output (24VDC, 30mA max.) is available to power outside transmitters.

    The serial communication option can be in Current Loop or RS485, with MODBUS RTU protocol and maximum speed of 19200 baud (485). The instrument’s entire programming procedure is made easier by grouping the parameters in function blocks (CFG for control parameters, Inp for inputs, Out for outputs, etc.).
    The instrument can also select the parameters to be displayed based on its hardware configuration, which automatically hides irrelevant parameters.

    The instrument is supplied with an “EASY” configuration calling for just a few parameters (only those pertaining to the model ordered and essential to the controller’s operation). In this way, you just have to set the setpoint and the alarm, then launch self-tuning with the specific button.

    For even simpler configuration, you can use a PC programming kit consisting of a cable and a guided program for Windows environment (see Technical Data code WINSTRUM).

  • New AS-Interface G11 Module with IP68/IP69k Protection

    The new AS-Interface G11 field modules from Pepperl+Fuchs offer an innovative clean housing concept in a robust, compact, round design, and are particularly suitable for assembly machines and process automation applications.
    Due to the unique O-ring seal technology, even cleaning processes involving pressure washers and mechanical stress do not affect the performance of the G11 modules. The smooth surfaces prevent dirt from accumulating!

    The housing is only 85 mm in diameter and can be mounted with the flat cable aligned in any direction.

    The outputs offer up to 2 A per M12 port, are short-circuit protected, and indicate an overload condition directly at the relevant M12 port. As a result, troubleshooting time at the installation location is minimized.

  • GibbsCAM 2010 to be demonstrated at SolidWorks World 2010

    Powerful capabilities including SolidWorks 2010 Interoperability, Plus Key Enhancements to Solids Machining and 64-bit Implementation.

    Gibbs and Associates, developer of GibbsCAM®, software for programming CNC machine tools and a Cimatron company, announced that GibbsCAM 2010 will be demonstrated at Booth #115 during the SolidWorks World 2010 Conference. The conference is being held from January 31 – February 3, 2010, at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, CA. This marks the twelfth consecutive year that Gibbs and Associates has participated at SolidWorks World.

    The demonstrations will include GibbsCAM 2010’s new feature enhancements along with GibbsCAM’s powerful interoperability with SolidWorks 2010 allowing users to go “from model to metal in minutes.” GibbsCAM, a SolidWorks Certified CAM Product, is able to work with SolidWorks designs in a number of different ways ensuring seamless interoperability between the two applications. The SolidWorks-to-GibbsCAM transfer add-in allows models to be directly transferred with a single menu selection within a SolidWorks session to GibbsCAM for NC programming.

    Key Enhancements to Solids Machining

    New, More Capable Plunge Roughing – Integrated into the software, with the ability to calculate material removal strategies that accommodate carbide-inserted drills, which require special motion for no-drag retractions, while avoiding collision in tight or narrow areas.

    Enhancements to Advanced 3D Machining – These include the addition of Hit Flats with specified tools for Pocketing, the ability to specify flatness tolerance in Flats Cut to ensure all desired “flat” areas are machined, locking high feed rate for Shortest Route and Minimal Vertical retract styles, addition of Trim to Ramp Advance as a Contour option for waterline cuts, specifying surface finish with step-over distance or scallop height parameters, and using Stock Bounding Box as an additional machining boundary.

    Addition of Option for Stock – Facet bodies, generated from a previous machining process, or brought in through a data file, can now be used as initial stock in solid pocketing.

    64-bit Implementation

    A significant development, the 64-bit implementation allows taking advantage of the more powerful, multi-processor PCs equipped with 4GB or more of RAM. This provides tighter interoperability with 64-bit CAD systems that are co-resident with GibbsCAM on a PC. Also, 64-bit operation reduces computation time when processing extremely long programs or working with complex geometry. It will also enable users to take advantage of system enhancements when running under the Windows 7 operating system.

    With these seamless capabilities, SolidWorks parts can be manufactured without fear of losing valuable geometric information. In addition, GibbsCAM’s associativity accommodates design revisions, an everyday occurrence in the design/manufacturing process. SolidWorks users who need to machine their parts will find that GibbsCAM is a simple and powerful solution. Going from model to metal just doesn’t get any easier.

  • Teaching Ancient Civilizations with Children’s Literature: Sudiata- Lion King of Mali

    9780395613023.jpg

    “Listen to me, children of the Bright Country, and ear the great deeds of ages past. The words I speak are those of my father and his father before him. Listen, then, to the story of Sundiata, the Lion King, who overcame all things to walk with greatness.”

    Passed down through oral tradtition and rooted in truth, this dramatic story recounts the story of Sundiata, the prince of Mali, who overcame diversity and his physical handicap and saved the kingdom of Mali. Sundiata: The Lion King of Mali written and illustrated by David Wisniewski is a charming tale of courage and strength appropriate for all ages. Readers will fall in love with a young Sundiata who, unable to walk, is taunted and ridiculed by the very people he is fated to lead. Sudiata is loved and protected only by his mother Sologon, his father the King, and his friend and griot Balla. With only the kindness in his heart, Sundiata survives many attempts on his life and ploys for his throne.

     After the death of the King and the banishment of his only friend Balla, Sundiata decides to flee Mali in hopes of returning when he has become stronger. Sundiata makes many friends and allies in his journey and they help him grow in strenth and in stature. When word comes to Sundiata that the Kingdom of Mali has been taken over by an evil sorcerer king Sassouma, he gathers an army of his allies and rides to take back Mali. Sundiata takes back his title as King of Mali and spreads his kindness through the land for many years.

    “Now I return as your king. Henceforth none shall interfere with anothers destiny. You, your children, and your children’s children shall find their appointed place within this land forever.”

    Curriculum Connections

    The tale of Sundiata: Lion King of Mali along with the vivid paper cut illustrations, is a perfect supplement for the Third Grade Social Science curriculum. Relating directly to the SOL 3.2 students will learn all about the South American kingdom of Mali. Sundiata’s tale is told by an elder explaining how the story has been passed down for generations allowing students to learn all about the rich oral tradition of the people of Mali. Sundiata’s struggle to keep and gain back his title gives a lot of insight into Mali’s government and along with the map at the beginning, students will get a better picture of Mali. Although relating directly to 3rd grade curriculum, the strength and patience of Sundiata can be an uplifting story for any age.

    Virginia Standards of Learning 3.2, 3.5

     Additional Resources

    • ARTSEDGE: this site provides many different lesson plans that follow along with Sundiata and his story. Lessons include making and African mask, a play, and video resources.
    • Africa for Kids: this website is kid friendly and allows studnets to learn fun and interesting facts about the African Kingdom of Mali as well as further information on Sundiata.
    • The Art of Ancient Mali from the Virgina Museum of History: this site includes background information on the true story of Sundiata, activities and lesson plans to be used in the classroom, and a glossary of terms used in the story.

     Book: Sundiata: The Lion King of Mali
    Author and Illustrator: David Wisniewski
    Photography of paper cut illustrations: Lee Salsberry
    Publisher: Clarion Books
    Publication Date: 1992

    Pages: 28
    Grade Range: 3-5
    ISBN: 0395613027

  • Chicago police seize 200 pounds of pot, 25 kilos of coke on Southwest Side

    CHICAGO  — A west suburban man was ordered held on a $50,000 cash bond Thursday after police stopped his car on the Southwest Side on Wednesday morning, a stop which led to the recovery of nearly $5 million in drugs and cash.

    Luis Miguel Herrera, 29, of Cicero was charged with possession of more than 5,000 grams of marijuana, according to Chicago Police.

    Bond was set at $50,000 cash Thursday, according to Cook County State’s Attorney’s office spokeswoman Tandra Simonton. A preliminary hearing is set for Feb. 23.

    After narcotics officers conducted surveillance, they stopped a car in the 2600 block of South Kildare Avenue about 8:30 a.m. Wednesday.

    The officers had just concluded part of an ongoing investigation into the transportation and sale of large quantities of drugs in the area, according to a release from police.

    Officers recovered about 220 pounds of cannabis and $8,000 in cash in the car, which was driven by Herrera, the release said. The cannabis had an estimated street value of $1.6 million.

    Further investigation led police to a garage in the 2600 block of South Kildare, where they recovered 25 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of $3.1 million, the release said.

    Four pounds of methamphetamine were also found in a second car. Police estimate the meth has a street value of almost $600,000.

    A Beretta .99 mm semi-automatic handgun was also recovered.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.


  • Concert review: MCBQ returns to the venue where it began 30 years ago

    Published Feb. 4, 2010
    Chuck Eaton, Special to the Tri-City Herald

    An enthusiastic audience crammed into the First Lutheran Church in Kennewick on Jan. 31 to hear the Mid-Columbia Brass Quintet play a joyful recital, 30 years after their first, in the very same venue. Randy Hubbs (trumpet), Don Paul (trumpet) and John Owen (horn) played that concert. Members Bob Swoboda (trombone) joined five years later and Phil Simpson (tuba), joined three years ago.

    Like the first concert, they opened with Sonata from the Bankelsangerlieder, (Bench singer’s songs) from the late 1600s, at a brisk tempo. Then, a contrast, Exhaltation, by American composer Brian Balmages; tone pyramids against lyrical melodies, passed from horn to horn. A lighter, nostalgic number followed, a Roaring Twenties Medley which brought Ragtime and Dixieland to popular tunes of the era.

    Having demonstrated their versatility, they returned to music of the first concert, the March from Arthur Frankenpohl’s Brass Quintet, with exposed melodies for each instrument and shifting tonality. Handel’s Rejoicing, with guest artist, organist Kim Barney, had Hubbs and Paul playing brilliant C trumpets, the quintet and the organ answering each other. The first half ended with Irving Berlin’s classic, Puttin’ on the Ritz, which tossed the melody from one instrument to another.

    After intermission, the quintet played Don Paul’s arrangement: Church Anniversary Medley. Then the concert became a family affair. Jan Paul, Don’s wife, sang Don’s Broadway Show Medley. Jan masterfully portrayed each song’s character, combining her expressive musical line and acting skills. A Scherzo by Ludwig Maurer, was followed by Morton Gould’s haunting Pavanne, beginning and ending with muted trumpets.

    Carisa Simpson, Phil’s wife, brought down the house with Momisms. To the music of the William Tell Overture, the old Lone Ranger theme, arranged by Phil, the song rattles off the advice a mother gives her children, rapid-fire. Carisa’s clear, bright soprano led the ensemble, which played a balanced accompaniment. The concert ended in a blaze of speed with Henry Fillmore’s The Circus Bee; virtuoso trumpet playing, followed by breakneck trombone-tuba unison.

    The players aspire to follow two rules: to make a beautiful sound, and to explore what it means to be a musician. The concert demonstrated not only how successful these music educators have been, but also how lucky the young people of our community are to have mentors like the MCBQ.

    *Chuck Eaton plays bass trombone with the Walla Walla Symphony and has played with the Mid-Columbia and Oregon East orchestras, and the Columbia Basin College Jazz Ensemble. He also has played jazz and classical music in other contexts with members of the MCBQ.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Facebook Rumored to Launch Email Service

    After Facebook decided to celebrate its sixth birthday in style, by launching a brand new homepage design and announcing it hit the 400 million users landmark, it looks like the social network isn’t resting on its laurels. TechCrunch reports that Facebook may be working on a full-blown webmail client which is actually rather close to launch. It’s just a… (read more)

  • Another Publisher Uses iPad as Leverage for Price Hike

    Despite Amazon’s knee-jerk banishment and reinstatement of its books following a price increase of its books, publisher Macmillan isn’t the only one looking to introduce a new, more lucrative pricing structure. HarperCollins is also eager for renegotiation, and now, Hachette Book Group has also joined the growing contingent of those looking to charge more for their electronic wares.

    This is what’s called the new “agency model” of pricing, which allows the company serving the content to take a cut. Apple’s own system calls for a 30 percent take of the revenue on all apps (and now books) sold through its online store. Amazon recently introduced a similar pricing structure for certain books and apps. It looks like major publishers are unwilling to absorb the cost of the seller’s cut, preferring instead to pass it along to consumers.

    Hachette CEO David Young, however, in a letter sent out detailing the new pricing plans, claims that book publishers will not make more money using the agency model, claiming the opposite, in fact:

    [W]e make less on each e-book sale under the new model; the author will continue to be fairly compensated and our e-book agents will make money on every digital sale. We’re willing to accept lower return for e-book sales as we control the value of our product–books, and content in general. We’re taking the long view on e-book pricing, and this new model helps protect the long term viability of the book marketplace.

    Call me skeptical, but I can’t help but feel that these publishers are acting more out of self-interest than anything else. It may be true that they actually make less on every book sold using the agency model for electronic distribution, but it’s probably also true that the books cost much less for them to create than print versions, too. I’d be willing to bet that they end up profiting more on a per copy sold basis in the end. Hachette makes other claims in his letter about how the deal is actually beneficial to consumers, despite the upfront price hike:

    There are many advantages to the agency model, for our authors, retailers, consumers, and publishers. It allows Hachette to make pricing decisions that are rational and reflect the value of our authors’ works. In the long run this will enable Hachette to continue to invest in and nurture authors’ careers–from major blockbusters to new voices. Without this investment in our authors, the diversity of books available to consumers will contract, as will the diversity of retailers, and our literary culture will suffer.

    It’s good spin, but it’s spin nonetheless. The bottom line, no matter how Hachette, Macmillan, or HarperCollins try to spin it, is that rather than introducing competition that will result in lower prices for book-buying customers, Apple’s iPad has in fact spelled the end of the $9.99 bestseller, for both Kindle and iPad users. Apple had to offer publishers an incentive to come over to its side, but the cost of that bargain is unfortunately one we as the buying public will be paying for.

    At least in the short term. A longer view reveals a different picture. Apple needed to gain access to the ebook market, and so was willing to make concessions regarding price. Publishers jumped at the chance to get out from under the tyranny of what amounted to Amazon’s ability to set prices unilaterally. But is it a case of “out of the frying pay, into the fire?”

    If Apple’s power play succeeds, Amazon could conceivably be forced to close up shop (though I still don’t think I’ll ever stop reading on my Kindle in favor of the iPad). If and when that happens, Apple will occupy the spot that Amazon once did, and will be able to dictate prices to publishers, much like they did and still continue to do with record labels. It’s a rare case where a monopoly could actually benefit the buying public, but only if you’re willing to pay more than paperback prices in the meantime. I’m not sure I’m willing to do that.

    Related GigaOM Pro Research: Evolution of the e-Book Market

  • Hoffman Estates fire chief honored for 35 years of service

    Hoffman Estates Trustee Gary Pilafas gently reminded the audience at Monday’s board meeting that he was only 6 years old when Fire Chief Robert Gorvett joined the fire department.

    Gorvett briefly left the chamber and wasn’t present for the good-natured ribbing from Pilafas.

    The village board recognized Gorvett on Monday, marking his 35 years working full time for the village. His wife Laurie and a group of his fellow firefighters attended in support.

    Gorvett actually started working for the village more than 35 years ago. He began as a volunteer firefighter in 1972 and joined full time in 1975.

    After numerous titles, including a couple stints as acting fire chief, he was given the permanent title as chief in 2008. He’s the 13th fire chief in Hoffman Estates’ history.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.


  • Video: How not to right an overturned semi truck

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    Click above to watch the video after the jump

    We’ve all seen semi trucks turned turtle on the freeway before, but as it turns out, the cleanup aftermath of a rollover can be as action-packed as the initial calamity. Said another way, If we ever run into an overturned hauler on a dangerous stretch of mountain road in Chile, we now at least know what not to do.

    Hit the jump to watch video of a semi that was flipped back over with a front-end loader in what is decidedly the wrong way. We don’t want to spill all the beans here, but the post-jump video contains quite a bit of excitement – even if the camerawork isn’t quite ready for Michael Bay. Enjoy the madness!

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading Video: How not to right an overturned semi truck

    Video: How not to right an overturned semi truck originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 12:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Rosenberg: This Is A Real Correction, S&P Headed To 912

    cnbc_david_rosenberg

    David Rosenber tends to be pretty bearish in his tone, though it’s been awhile since we’ve seen him offer a real, numerical forecast.

    That changed today:

    This is a stock market that is as overpriced as it was heading into the October
    1987 crash and as the case back then, it wasn’t about the fundamentals but
    about policy discord between the U.S., Japan and Germany.  A market priced for
    perfection requires perfection on all fronts.  

    The comments on Fast Money were that the fundamentals hadn’t changed —
    this selloff is pure emotion.  Really?  We had a 70% rally from the March low in
    advance of any serious turn in the economic data — this was purely a bear
    market rally that was rooted in the technicals (and short coverings).  How do we
    know?  Because at the January 19 high in the S&P 500 of 1150 it had
    completed a 50% retracement off the slide from the October 2007 highs to the
    March 2009 trough.  

    Now, since this is a technically-driven market, we are bound to get a 50%
    reversal of the bear market rally, which would take us to 912 on the S&P 500 —
    so keep your seatbelts on.  We had been warning for a while that too much
    complacency had set in, and what happens when the market shoots up 70%
    without taking any serious break along the way?  Investors tend to believe that
    we are into some sustainable new parabolic bull run.  

    Meanwhile, its seems that Mr. Market had already started to top out back in
    mid-September, yet so many pundits still believed we were still in the throes of a
    bull phase market even though a vivid topping formation was becoming
    increasingly evident.  How about that slide in bond yields yesterday?  In the
    realm of technical analysis, a break towards 3.2% on the U.S. 10-year Treasury
    note yield cannot be ruled out over the near-term. 

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Igreja de Vera Cruz de Marmelar

    Distrito de Évora, Portugal | Relics and Reliquaries

    Relics of the true cross are a strange thing, and carry with them a Christian legend most Christians have never heard of.

    Known as the “Golden Legend,” it begins as Adam – as in Adam and Eve – lays dieing. Adam asks his son Seth to go the archangel Michael to get a seed from the tree of life. Seth does so, places the seed in his fathers mouth and buries him. A tree grows from this seed, and the tree is chopped down and used in a sacred bridge, which Queen Sheba crossed to visit King Solomon. Eventually the wood from the bridge is used in the crucifix on which Jesus is said to be crucified, thus completing a line from Adam to Jesus.

    The first pieces of the true cross are said to have been found some 300 years after his death by the mother of Roman emperor Constantine, the first Christian emperor. They were kept as treasures of the Eastern Roman empire, but after Constantinople (aka Byzantium, and today Istanbul) was sacked in the forth crusade in 1204 the “true cross” was divvied up into smaller pieces “with other very precious relics among the knights; later, after their return to the homeland, it was donated to churches and monasteries.” (From Chronica regia Coloniensis.)

    However, as having a piece of the cross was good for business, by the end of the Middle Ages so many churches had claimed to possess a piece of the true cross, that in John Calvin’s (of Calvinism) words “there was enough wood in them to fill a ship.”

    Igreja de Vera Cruz de Marmelar or “Church of the True Cross of Malamar” in Portugal is one such church to still hold claim to a piece of the true cross. (Other churches holding a piece of the ‘true cross’ include Santo Toribio de Liébana in Spain, the Schatzkammer in Vienna, the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, Premonstratensian Abbey in Switzerland, and Notre Dame in Paris.)

    However the Igreja de Vera Cruz de Marmelar may use the piece of the cross in a much more active way the any of these other churches. According to a local, the church is “a place where exorcisms are still carried out on a regular basis, with the help of a small piece of the Holy Cross. Even non-believers admit to a very strange ‘vibe’ around this large church in a small town.”

    Believed by locals to create miracles, the piece of the cross is taken through the streets in procession each year, and the cross is believed to help in healing psychological and spiritual disorders.

  • President Obama Nominates Four to Serve on the United States District Court Bench

    02.04.10 12:15 PM

    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Obama nominated Elizabeth Foote, Judge Mark Goldsmith, Marc Treadwell and Judge Josephine Tucker to be United States District Court judges.

    “These men and women have had distinguished legal careers and I am honored to ask them to continue their work as judges on the federal bench,” said President Obama. “They will serve the American people with integrity and an unwavering commitment to justice.”

    Elizabeth Erny Foote: Nominee for the United States District Court, Western District of Louisiana
    Elizabeth Erny Foote is a partner in The Smith Foote Law Firm, LLP, in Alexandria, Louisiana, where she specializes in commercial business litigation and counseling, insurance defense and medical malpractice defense. She has been in full-time practice in Alexandria since 1979. She served as President of the Louisiana State Bar Association from 2008-09. She also co-chaired the Bar’s Disaster Relief Committee in 2005 and served as president of the Louisiana Civil Justice Center, the organization it established to serve the legal needs of the community in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Ms. Foote received her B.A., with honors, from Louisiana State University in 1974, her M.A. from Duke University in 1975, and her J.D. from Louisiana State University Paul M. Hebert Law Center in 1978.

    Mark A. Goldsmith: Nominee for the United States District Court, Eastern District of Michigan
    Judge Mark A. Goldsmith is a Circuit Court Judge in Oakland County, Michigan. Judge Goldsmith has served as a state court trial judge since March 2004, presiding over criminal and civil matters. Prior to his appointment to the bench, Judge Goldsmith was a litigation partner at the law firm of Honigman Miller Schwartz & Cohn in Detroit, where he worked since 1987, and also litigated at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York following law school. He has served as an adjunct instructor at Wayne State Law School, teaching pretrial litigation. Judge Goldsmith is a former President of the Eastern District of Michigan chapter of the Federal Bar Association. He helped establish the Circle of Friends program, which teaches language and acculturation skills to new immigrants, in Oakland County, and also established JUST US, a continuing judicial education program for the Oakland County Circuit Court and Probate Court bench. Judge Goldsmith received his B.A., with high distinction, in 1974 from the University of Michigan. He received his J.D. cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1977.

    Marc Thomas Treadwell: Nominee for the United States District Court, Middle District of Georgia
    Marc Thomas Treadwell is a shareholder and partner with Adams, Jordan and Treadwell, P.C., in Macon, Georgia, where he has specialized in personal injury and wrongful death actions since 2000. Prior to that, he worked as an attorney with Chambless Higdon and Carson, LLP, and Kilpatrick and Cody, where he represented clients in civil litigation. Treadwell is an active member and current President of the William Augustus Bootle Inn of Court and an Adjunct Professor of Law at the Walter F. George School of Law at Mercer University. He has been listed in Georgia Super Lawyers and was recently inducted into the International Academy of Trial Lawyers. Treadwell received his B.A. from Valdosta State University in 1978, and a J.D. from Mercer University in 1981.

    Josephine Staton Tucker: Nominee for the United States District Court, Central District of California
    Judge Josephine Staton Tucker is a California Superior Court Judge, which is California’s trial-level court. Judge Tucker has served as a state court judge in the County of Orange since 2002, and her tenure has included assignments presiding over criminal, family, and civil law matters. Judge Tucker has also served on the California Court of Appeals on temporary assignment by order of the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court. Prior to her appointment to the bench, Judge Tucker litigated employment law cases on behalf of both individuals and corporations at Morrison & Foerster LLP, where she worked as a partner and an associate from 1987 to 2002. Judge Tucker received her B.A., summa cum laude, in 1983 from William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri. After receiving her J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1986, Judge Tucker served as a law clerk to the Honorable John R. Gibson on the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Presidential Nominations Sent to the Senate 2/4/10

    02.04.10 01:29 PM

    NOMINATIONS SENT TO THE SENATE:

    Daryl J. Boness, of Maine, to be a Member of the Marine Mammal Commission for a term expiring May 13, 2013. (Reappointment)

    Parker Loren Carl, of Kentucky, to be United States Marshal for the Eastern District of Kentucky for the term of four years, vice Dennis Michael Klein.

    David B. Fein, of Connecticut, to be United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut for the term of four years, vice Kevin J. O’Connor, resigned.

    Elizabeth Erny Foote, of Louisiana, to be United States District Judge for the Western District of Louisiana, vice Tucker L. Melancon, retired.

    Kerry Joseph Forestal, of Indiana, to be United States Marshal for the Southern District of Indiana for the term of four years, vice Peter Manson Swaim.

    Mark A. Goldsmith, of Michigan, to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, vice John Corbett O’Meara, retired.

    Gerald Sidney Holt, of Virginia, to be United States Marshal for the Western District of Virginia for the term of four years, vice G. Wayne Pike.

    Clifton Timothy Massanelli, of Arkansas, to be United States Marshal for the Eastern District of Arkansas for the term of four years, vice Robert Gideon Howard, Jr.

    Scott Jerome Parker, of North Carolina, to be United States Marshal for the Eastern District of North Carolina for the term of four years, vice Clyde R. Cook, Jr.

    Timothy Q. Purdon, of North Dakota, to be United States Attorney for the District of North Dakota for the term of four years, vice Drew Howard Wrigley.

    Larry Robinson, of Hawaii, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, vice William J. Brennan, resigned.

    Marc T. Treadwell, of Georgia, to be United States District Judge for the Middle District of Georgia, vice Hugh Lawson, retired.

    Josephine Staton Tucker, of California, to be United States District Judge for the Central District of California, vice Alicemarie H. Stotler, retired.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Statement from The President on House Passage of PAYGO

    02.04.10 01:35 PM

    I am pleased that the House of Representatives has passed statutory pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) into law.

    Statutory PAYGO would hold us to a simple but bedrock principle: Congress can only spend a dollar if it saves a dollar elsewhere. Mandatory spending increases and tax cuts must be paid for; they’re not free, and borrowing to finance them is not a sustainable long-term policy.

    It is no coincidence that when we last had statutory PAYGO, during the 1990s, we turned deficits into surpluses. The passage of statutory PAYGO today will help usher out an era of irresponsibility and begin putting the country back on a fiscally sustainable path.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Remarks and Q&A by the President at DNC Fundraising Reception

    02.05.10 05:33 AM

    February 4, 2010

    Capital Hilton
    Washington, D.C.

    6:15 P.M. EST

    THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody! Thank you. Well —

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: Yes we can!

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. It is wonderful to see so many good friends. First of all, I want to thank Michele for the wonderful introduction and great story that she told. I want to thank Tim Kaine, who has been not only an outstanding leader for us but one of the best governors Virginia has ever had. Give Tim Kaine a big round of applause. (Applause.)

    I understand we’ve got thousands of people online, so I just want to say to all the folks online, thank you for joining us. We appreciate it. And I want all of you to know right off the bat how much I appreciate what each and every one of you has done — not just for me but for the country.

    Many of you were on the front lines in our campaign — some of you from the very beginning, making phone calls and knocking on doors and trudging through the frozen fields of Iowa. (Applause.) You didn’t know the snow was moving this way. (Laughter.)

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: We can handle it!

    THE PRESIDENT: We can handle it. You staked your reputation on some guy that nobody had ever heard of — couldn’t pronounce my name. Some of you got involved in a campaign for the very first time. In some cases, you just got involved for the first time in a very long time, because you believed that we were at a defining moment in our nation’s history; that your voice could make a difference. And not a single day goes by when I don’t think of the time, the energy, the money, the undying faith that you put into a campaign that wasn’t just about winning an election — it was about changing a country.

    Last year, we asked you to take on something new. We asked you to help us make the promise of the campaign a reality. And I know how hard many of you have worked in your communities to do that, either as part of Organizing For America or simply by talking to your friends and neighbors, your coworkers. What you do matters. It’s made the successes of the last year possible.

    It’s because of you that we were able to uphold the principle of equal pay for equal work. (Applause.) It’s because of you that we lifted the ban on stem cell research and began restoring science to its rightful place in America. (Applause.) It’s because of you that we extended the promise of health care to 4 million children who didn’t have it. (Applause.) It’s because of you that we passed the strongest veterans budget in decades. (Applause.) It’s because of you that we protected families from getting ripped off by credit card companies, and children from being targeted by big tobacco, and responsible consumers from the twin plagues of mortgage fraud and predatory lending. (Applause.)

    We appointed Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court. (Applause.) We passed a service bill named for Ted Kennedy that’s giving young people and not-so-young people new ways to give back to their community. We’ve begun working with Congress and our military to finally repeal the law that denies gay Americans the right to serve the country that they love because of who they are. (Applause.)

    That’s what your support has helped us do here at home. Abroad, we’ve begun a new era of engagement. We’re working with our partners to stop the spread of nuclear weapons, and seek a world free of them. We’re working with other nations to confront climate change. We banned torture. (Applause.) We’re rebuilding our military and reaffirming our alliances. We’ve begun to leave Iraq to its own people. (Applause.) We’ve charted a new way forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan. And we’ve made progress in taking the fight to al Qaeda across the globe. I went to Cairo on behalf of America to begin a new dialogue with the Muslim world. (Applause.) And we are living up to a moment that demands American leadership by standing tall alongside the people of Haiti. (Applause.)

    So in ways large and small, we’ve begun to deliver on the change that you believed in. But the reason you and I are here tonight is because there’s so much more work to be done.

    On the day I took office, we confronted a financial system on the brink of collapse, an economy bleeding 700,000 jobs per month, a $1.3 trillion deficit, and two wars that were costly in every sense of the word.

    The solutions to these challenges wouldn’t be quick or easy, and sometimes they wouldn’t be popular. We knew that. But we decided that we were going to govern. We decided that we were going to lead. We didn’t have our finger out to the wind. We weren’t reading the polls every minute. We decided that we would begin a long and difficult journey to get this country back where it needs to be. (Applause.)

    Because of the bold, swift, and coordinated action we took, we can stand here today and say we prevented another depression. We broke the back of the recession. The economy that was shrinking by 6 percent a year ago is now growing by 6 percent. (Applause.)

    So the worst of the storm has passed, but all of you — from what you see in your own lives, what you see in your neighborhoods, what you see on the job — is that a lot of devastation remains. Many of you are seeing it in your own communities — shuttered businesses; foreclosed homes; friends, neighbors, family members who still can’t find work. And on top of all this, you’ve got the underlying challenges that middle-class families were dealing with for decades.

    For two years, I traveled this country with you, and everywhere I went, I heard stories of folks who were trying their best to hold it all together while working harder and harder for less money. We heard families sitting around the kitchen table wondering if a secure retirement was even possible; if a college education was still achievable; if the climb of health care costs would ever stop. We heard people wondering if the dream that generations of Americans had built and defended was slowly slipping away.

    Those are the stories that caused me to run for President of the United States. Those are the stories that led you to support me. Those are the stories that lead us to do every single thing that we can to create an economy that hasn’t just recovered but where hard work is valued and responsibility is rewarded; where businesses are hiring and wages are rising; where our middle class is getting stronger and feeling more secure.

    Now, our most urgent task is job creation -– that was our number one priority last year; it’s our number one priority this year. So we’ll give tax breaks and loans to small business to help them hire new workers and raise wages and invest in new plants and equipment. We’ll put even more Americans to work constructing clean energy facilities and upgrading our infrastructure for the future. We’ll create incentives for consumers to make their homes more energy efficient, creating jobs and saving families money. And it’s time that we put an end to tax breaks for companies that are shipping jobs overseas — (applause) — we need to give those tax breaks to companies that create jobs right here in the United States of America. (Applause.)

    But the truth is, these steps alone won’t make up for the 7 million jobs that we’ve lost over the last two years. Those steps alone won’t make up for the economic security — insecurity that middle-class families have lost over the past decade. The only way to do that is to lay a new foundation for long-term economic growth. The only way to do that is to finally confront the problems that Washington has put off for too long, and that we’ve been talking about for decades.

    Now, here’s the deal, though, folks. This is where change gets hard, when you start going after the real hard things that have been holding us back for so long. This is where we start running headlong into the lobbyists and the special interests; this is where the bitterness and misinformation that has come to characterize so much of our politics starts rearing its ugly head. I know some of you might feel discouraged because changing the ways of Washington is hard; it’s harder than a lot of you thought it might be. Sometimes it may make you feel like — that it’s not possible. You might want to give up.

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: We believe in you! (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Don’t give up. (Applause.) I don’t want you to feel discouraged. I want you to understand that it just means we got to push that much harder. (Applause.) It means that we’ve got to keep up the fight. The forces of the status quo may not give an inch, but we will not give an inch. (Applause.) Because we didn’t come this far to put things off; we didn’t come here to play it safe; we didn’t do all this work to take the easy road to get through the next election. That’s not why you elected me. You came here to solve problems — once and for all — for the next generation. (Applause.)

    That begins by opening this government up to the people. We were the first White House ever to post all our visitors online. (Applause.) We excluded lobbyists from policy-making jobs or seats on federal boards and commissions. (Applause.) I’ve called on Congress to make all earmark requests public on one central Web site before they come up for a vote so that you can see how your money is spent.

    And even as we open up government, we also have to change its tone. And I won’t give up on that, either. (Applause.) The American people are right to be frustrated by a Washington where every single day is Election Day -– it’s a place so absorbed with how each party is doing that it loses sight of how the American people are doing.

    And that’s why I went and visited with the House Republican caucus last Friday. (Applause.) We had a good exchange, a good discussion about the challenges facing the American people, our ideas to solve them. We think it was good for the country. I had fun. (Laughter and applause.)

    Now, look, obviously there’s some issues where we don’t agree. That’s okay. Vigorous debate is healthy. We’ll tussle from time to time. That’s what democracy is all about. But there’s some issues we do agree on. So I told my Republican friends I want to work together when we can — and I meant it. I believe that if we put a focus on solving problems instead of scoring political points, we can get a lot done together. (Applause.) I also made clear that I’m going to call them out if what they’re offering are political talking points that won’t solve problems. (Applause.) And I had to insist that we have to throw out that tired old playbook that says blocking everything is easier than actually delivering for the American people. Otherwise, we won’t move this country forward. (Applause.)

    And ultimately, that’s why I’m here. That’s why you’re here. That’s why you joined this campaign. That’s why you’ve helped this past year. That’s why I need your help now. Because you know as well as anyone that change never comes without a fight. And we’ve got — we’ve got some fights to wage.

    We’re going to keep fighting to spark innovation and ignite a clean energy sector where American workers are making solar panels and wind towers and cutting-edge batteries — (applause) — because the nation that leads the clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy. (Applause.)

    We’re going to keep fighting to give every American the best education possible. (Applause.) That’s why we launched the Race to the Top program, to make sure every school lives up to its potential so that every child lives up to their potential. That’s why we’re strengthening our community colleges. (Applause.) That’s why we’re making higher education more affordable — because nobody should go broke because they chose to go to college. (Applause.)

    That’s why we’re going to keep fighting for common-sense rules of the road for Wall Street. Look, let me be clear: We need a strong financial sector. I want our banks to thrive in loaning money to businesses who are hiring workers and investing in plants and equipment and making things. Without a stable, strong financial sector, businesses can’t get the capital they need to grow and create jobs, and families can’t finance a home loan or education.

    And the truth is, is that not every person on Wall Street was engaging in shenanigans. (Laughter.) Not all of them. And the truth is, is that the — I want to hear ideas about how we can strengthen the financial sector in a responsible way. But surely we can all agree that we have to ensure our economy is never again brought to its knees by outdated and inadequate financial rules or by the irresponsibility of the few. So we’re going to keep on fighting for that. (Applause.)

    I would think this is going to be a bipartisan effort — I would think — because everybody has been harmed by what’s happened. And every voter out there — Democrat, Republican, independent — is furious about what happened. My hope would be that Washington would respond.

    And, yes, we are going to keep fighting to fix a health system that too often works better for the insurance industry than it does for the American people. (Applause.) Now, I — you heard me at the State of the Union — I didn’t take this on because it was good politics. I love how the pundits on these cable shows, they all announce, "Oh, boy, this was really tough politically for the President." Well, I’ve got my own pollsters, I know — (laughter) — I knew this was hard. I knew seven Presidents had failed. I knew seven Congresses hadn’t gotten it done. You don’t think I got warnings, "Don’t try to take this on"? I got those back in December of last year.

    So, yes, we knew this was hard. But I took it on because families were at the mercy of skyrocketing premiums, soaring out-of-pocket costs, insurance companies that routinely deny coverage because of preexisting conditions, or see their insurance dropped altogether because they get sick.

    We took it on because costs were closing small businesses. They were keeping larger ones from competing on a level playing field. They were eating into workers’ take-home pay. They were canceling raises. We took it on because it’s the single best way to bring down our deficits. (Applause.) By the way, nobody has disputed that. When I was before the Republican caucus, it was very clear. I said, look, you say you’re concerned about deficit reduction? Nobody can dispute the fact that if we don’t tackle surging health care costs, that we can’t get control of our budget. And by the way, the approach that we put forward would reduce our deficit by as much as a trillion dollars over the next two decades.

    We took it on because every single day, 15,000 Americans join the tens of millions who don’t have health insurance — and every single year, 18,000 Americans die because of it.

    I got a letter — I got a note today from one of my staff — they forwarded it to me — from a woman in St. Louis who had been part of our campaign, very active, who had passed away from breast cancer. She didn’t have insurance. She couldn’t afford it, so she had put off having the kind of exams that she needed. And she had fought a tough battle for four years. All through the campaign she was fighting it, but finally she succumbed to it. And she insisted she’s going to be buried in an Obama t-shirt. (Laughter.)

    But think about this: She was fighting that whole time not just to get me elected, not even to get herself health insurance, but because she understood that there were others coming behind her who were going to find themselves in the same situation and she didn’t want somebody else going through that same thing. (Applause.) How can I say to her, "You know what? We’re giving up"? How can I say to her family, "This is too hard"? How can Democrats on the Hill say, "This is politically too risky"? How can Republicans on the Hill say, "We’re better off just blocking anything from happening"?

    That can’t be the message that the American people are delivering. Yes, they’re nervous, they’re anxious, they’re in a tough time right now. The thing they want most are jobs. They really don’t like the process in Washington, the sausage-making. That part I understand. But I know that they don’t — but I know they don’t want to just offer nothing to the millions of people in America who are in the situation that that woman was in. That’s what we campaigned on. And we are going to keep on working to get it done -– with Democrats and I hope with Republicans and everybody else in between -– to bring down costs, to end the worst practices of the insurance industry, to finally give every American the chance to choose quality, affordable health care. We are going to keep on working to get it done. (Applause.)

    AUDIENCE: Yes we can! Yes we can! Yes we can!

    THE PRESIDENT: I am not going to walk away from these fights. And I know you won’t -– because you didn’t before. You didn’t when folks were slamming doors in your faces — "Barama who?" (Laughter.) You didn’t quit when you heard voices saying we should scale back and throttle down and accept less. You remember that. When folks were saying our sights were set too high; that our faith in this country was misplaced; that our hope was naïve; that you couldn’t change Washington; that you had to accommodate yourself to the political realities. You’ve all heard that. You didn’t listen to those voices then -– your voice proved them wrong. You proved that nothing can withstand the power of millions of voices that are calling for change.

    That is what you did. That’s what I’m asking you to do again now. And it’s even tougher now than it was, because governing, delivering for the American people, is harder than campaigning. It’s going to — and you guys –

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: We need campaign finance reform!

    THE PRESIDENT: I heard you the first time, sister. (Laughter.) We’re fighting for that, too.

    You guys, I just want to remind you, this is an extraordinary moment in our history. We have been given the opportunity to change our country for the better. That change begins with each of you in this room and all of you watching all across America. It begins when you refuse to settle for the status quo; when you reject the cynicism and the skepticism that we can no longer do big things in America; when you believe that people who love their country can change it — that’s how we’re going to finish what we started, because we do not back down, we don’t quit, I don’t quit. (Applause.) I’m still fired up. I’m still ready to go. And it’s because of you. (Applause.)

    Thank you, everybody. God bless you. (Applause.)

    AUDIENCE: We don’t quit! We don’t quit! We don’t quit!

    THE PRESIDENT: Hello, hello, hello. Hello. Hello. Now, my understanding — everybody know Mitch?

    AUDIENCE: Yes!

    THE PRESIDENT: Mitch has I believe four questions that he has drawn from the list of questions that were sent from all across the country, and I’m going to try to answer them. So with that — Mitch.

    MR. STEWART: Thank you, sir. Our first question comes, Mr. President, from one of OFA’s dedicated community organizers, Dream Gunther in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It’s a question that’s on a lot of folks’ minds within OFA and I think across the country: How can we help pass health care reform, and what is the strategy to move it forward? (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: It is a good question. We are closer to a health care reform system that works for all Americans than we have ever been. Never before have you seen a bill pass through the House and then a bill pass through the Senate and where 90 percent of those bills — those two bills overlap. Democrats in the House and the Senate have been in discussions over the last several weeks to finalize a package that represents the best ideas of both the House and the Senate.

    Here’s what we know will be in it: It provides coverage to at least 30 million Americans who don’t have it. Many of those are small business owners or workers for small businesses. It creates an exchange, a marketplace, where people who don’t have health insurance or small businesses that want to get a better deal can pool their purchasing power and then negotiate with insurance companies to drive down costs and drive down premiums — the same way, by the way, that federal workers and members of Congress, by the way, and people who work for big companies are able to get a better deal because they’re part of a bigger pool.

    It has insurance reforms that benefit everybody potentially who has health insurance or currently doesn’t have health insurance so that we put an end to, for example, the practice of not being able to get health insurance because of a preexisting condition. (Applause.) We make sure that they can’t just drop you when you get sick and you need insurance the most.

    And we’ve got a whole series of measures for cost reductions in the health care system over the long term, by reducing waste and unnecessary tests that are duplicative and end up wasting money, by ensuring that there’s strong prevention funding so that children are getting regular checkups and they can go to see a doctor instead of going to the emergency room.

    So — and by the way, all of it is paid for, and not only is it deficit-neutral but the Congressional Budget Office, which is the bipartisan office that’s the scorekeeper for how much things cost in Congress, says it’s going to reduce our costs by a trillion dollars.

    Now, those two bills weren’t identical, so it was important for folks in both the House and the Senate to sit down and figure out what’s the final bill that the Democrats believe in and want to move forward. The next step is what I announced at the State of the Union, which is to call on our Republican friends to present their ideas. What I’d like to do is have a meeting whereby I’m sitting with the Republicans, sitting with the Democrats, sitting with health care experts, and let’s just go through these bills — their ideas, our ideas — let’s walk through them in a methodical way so that the American people can see and compare what makes the most sense.

    And then I think that we’ve got to go ahead and move forward on a vote. We’ve got to move forward on a vote. (Applause.) But as I said at the State of the Union, I think we should be very deliberate, take our time. We’re going to be moving a jobs package forward over the next several weeks; that’s the thing that’s most urgent right now in the minds of Americans all across the country. And that will allow everybody to get the real facts, both about the health care crisis that we face, why it’s so important for deficit reduction, why it’s so important for families all across the country. It allows us to see are there, in fact, some better ideas out there?

    When I was at the Republican caucus somebody told me they had an idea to provide universal coverage and it wouldn’t cost anything. (Laughter.) Which — I thought, that’s great; I want to see that. Now, I did say I want to make sure that’s there are some independent health care experts and economists and doctors who would confirm this. But if they can confirm it, why wouldn’t I want to take that — I wish I’d thought of that before. (Laughter.)

    But here’s the key, is to not let the moment slip away. (Applause.) And I have to say — I have to say part of what makes health care so hard, and why we are the only advanced nation on Earth that doesn’t have some form of universal health care, is because even when the system doesn’t work people still want to kind of cling on to the devil they know because they’re worried about the devil they don’t. It’s very easy to scare folks. I mean, if you go out there right now and you ask the average person — and some of you have done this, talked to your friends, talked to your neighbors — they’re certain that they would have to go into a government plan, which isn’t true, but that’s still a perception a lot of people have. They’re still pretty sure that they’d have to give up their doctor. They’re still pretty sure that if they’re happy with their health care plan that it’s bad for them. They’re still positive that this is going to add to the deficit.

    So there’s a lot of information out there that people understandably are concerned about. And that’s why I think it’s very important for us to have a methodical, open process over the next several weeks, and then let’s go ahead and make a decision. And it may be that — you know, if Congress decides — if Congress decides we’re not going to do it, even after all the facts are laid out, all the options are clear, then the American people can make a judgment as to whether this Congress has done the right thing for them or not. And that’s how democracy works. There will be elections coming up and they’ll be able to make a determination and register their concerns one way or the other during election time. All right? (Applause.)

    MR. STEWART: Mr. President, the second question comes to us via email from El Paso, Texas. Rebecca Harris writes, "What can be done to get money to small businesses? I keep hearing that banks are still not loaning because of lack of confidence. Do smaller banks have the ability to get money with the stipulation that they loan it out so that we can get the economy moving again?"

    THE PRESIDENT: This is a really important question. I’ve been traveling a lot lately doing town hall meetings and then talking to small business owners as I’m traveling around the country. And everywhere I go, I hear the same thing, which is, "We feel like the economy is starting to improve and we’re starting to get orders again. We want to expand, or we need to replenish our inventory, or we are interested in maybe hiring another two or three workers because we can’t just keep on putting all our current workers on overtime." So they’re on the brink of wanting to expand, move, hire, but what they’re saying is, we still can’t get financing.

    Now, credit is now available for the biggest companies, and they are actually starting to make investments. Every indicator out there is that the economy, across the board, including in manufacturing, is starting to make investments again.

    But the big companies may be able to get credit; small companies still can’t. And when you talk to the smaller banks what they’ll say is, well, on the one hand the regulators are looking over our shoulder. They used to say it was fine for us to make these loans. Now, they’re saying we shouldn’t.

    So that’s one concern, and another concern is some of them still have pretty tough liabilities on their books because a lot of them lent into commercial real estate or other loans that they’re not sure are going to get repaid.

    So what we’ve done is twofold. One is we’ve said how can we get some money directly out there through the Small Business Administration, and we’ve ramped up lending through the Small Business Administration by 70 percent and we have eliminated fees and we have increased guarantees — (applause) — so that you’re seeing a huge increase in the volume of small business loans.

    The problem is the SBA can’t cover all the need out there. And there are 30,000 community banks out there that are serving their communities and small businesses, so we’ve got to get money to them. That’s why what we’ve said is, let’s get $30 billion that’s been repaid as a consequence of the big banks getting well and having to repay their TARP money — let’s take that money and set up a fund whereby we can start lending that money through small banks.

    Now, the last thing I’d say is — I was asked is there a way of stipulating that this will go to particular loans. We don’t want the government to be in the business of saying you have to give this loan or deny that loan, because we’re not on the ground and we can’t review each and every one of those loans. But we are very confident that the most efficient way for us to get money to small businesses is to make sure that the community banks are getting these financing facilities that allow them to get money out. And if they do, we think that that’s going to be a major job creator right now. (Applause.)

    MR. STEWART: Mr. President, as you might know, Gen44 is the newest program at the DNC aimed at empowering young leadership across this country. A Gen44 member, Eric Casher (phonetic), sent along our third question: "As young people, we’ve always been taught that America leads the world, both by the strength of our ideals and the might of our economy. We’re frustrated and worried, though, that other nations — in particular, China — are moving ahead of the U.S. in investing in new industries to create the jobs of the 21st century. What are you doing, and what can we do, to make sure we’re not left behind?"

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, I had lunch with some corporate CEOs — big companies — we want to increase exports, we want to start selling overseas. We’ve been an economy that just is consuming — that’s not good for our long-term economic growth. We want to produce and sell. So I talked to them about this, and every one of them was concerned about us falling behind in some key areas relative not just to China, but countries like South Korea and other Asian countries; in some cases, in some sectors, European countries.

    Number one, we have to revamp our education system. That’s why I’m so proud of what we’ve done with — (applause) — that’s why I’m so proud with what we’ve done with Race to the Top. We want to reward excellence.

    Now, the federal government doesn’t provide the majority of funding for schools. Mostly it comes from local school districts. But the money that we do give, let’s make sure we’re incentivizing best practices, getting the best teachers in front of the classroom, making sure that we’ve got the best data on how to improve school performance, making sure that we’re targeting some of those low-performing schools, because we can’t just look at the schools that are in the middle — we’ve got to bring schools that are at the bottom up to snuff because that’s going to be our future workforce. So that’s number one.

    That includes, by the way, making sure that we meet our 2020 goal of once again having the highest rate of college graduation in the world. (Applause.) We used to be number one. We’re not number one any longer. We’ve got to produce more math and science graduates. Those are all going to be top priorities.

    The second thing: Everybody sees energy as a prime source of growth in the future, and we’re already slipping behind. We’re slipping behind in some traditional industries like the nuclear industry. That I think is a mistake. If you care about greenhouse gases, we’ve got to look at a safe and secure nuclear industry.

    But we have to look at new, alternative energy sources of the future. And I’m proud that the Recovery Act gave the biggest investment of clean energy — made the biggest investment of clean energy both in research and development but also actual construction and commercial application in history. (Applause.)

    And we’ve got to build on that investment from last year. We’ve got to push hard this year so that we are once again the leaders in solar and wind and high-efficiency batteries that can lead to the plug-in automobiles of the future.

    We’ve got to finally set up an infrastructure that spurs on that kind of long-term growth. And that means having a smart electricity grid that can take all that good energy from solar and wind and take it from a place like South Dakota down to Chicago, into a garage, where somebody is then plugging in that plug-in hybrid that’s getting 150 miles per gallon of gas, which will lead us to energy independence; it will lead to jobs right here in the United States of America. (Applause.) But it requires leadership and it requires us to build for the future and not just look backwards.

    And the most important thing right now I think for our economic growth is for the American people to feel confident about our future. You know, we’ve gone through these periods before. Some of you are old enough — not all of you — but remember back in the ’80s how everybody was saying, oh, Japan is taking over and they’re buying everything here and we’re on decline? This happens periodically, every 30, 40 years or so, maybe every 25. Suddenly everybody announces, oh, America is on decline, and there’s some new competitor out there. It was Japan; now it’s China.

    We have the best workers in the world, we got the best universities in the world — (applause) — we’ve got the most dynamic economy in the world, but we can’t be afraid of the future. And we’ve got to have a government, a political system, that works — not as an impediment to business, but one that works to lay the conditions for business success. That’s how we grew in the past. We built an interstate railroad system that was not just done on its own. We built an Interstate Highway System; that wasn’t — that didn’t just happen overnight. The Internet didn’t just, you know, suddenly appear.

    Those were all investments in which government helped to seed and catalyze growth, and then it moved forward. And that’s what we’ve got to do today. (Applause.)

    All right, last question.

    MR. STEWART: Last question, sir, comes from an OFA community organizer, Brandon Furry (phonetic), in southern California. Brandon writes: "I’m a 28-year-old volunteer with OFA. Even with a full-tuition scholarship I had to work three part-time jobs. I barely could afford food and had little time to study. As my grades started to drop I decided to drop out rather than ruin my hopes of doing well in school. I would like to go back to school full-time. How are you going to help people like me to make it easier to go back to school and make a lasting contribution to our country?"

    THE PRESIDENT: Here’s what we’ve already done: We’ve significantly increased Pell grants, made them more accessible to more people, and increased the level so that they would actually pay for a community college education or a four-year college education. The next step is to relieve the burden that so many young people are feeling in terms of the amount of debt that they’re taking out just to go to school.

    So what we’ve said is this — and there’s legislation pending right now that we want to get passed this year that says to every young person in America, you go to college, you will not have to pay more than 10 percent of your income in repaying student loans. So you are assured not to go broke — (applause) — you will not go broke when you choose to go to college. Not only that, after 20 years — assuming you’ve been making regular payments — your debt is forgiven. (Applause.) And if you go into public service, if you’re a teacher or a firefighter or some other — or you’re working for NASA or any other — any other public service out there, then we will see your loans forgiven after 10 years — (applause) — because you’re probably not going to be making as much money.

    Not only is the legislation pending, but we know how it can be paid for, which is to stop providing subsidies to banks and financial institutions that are serving as middlemen on student loans. (Applause.) Let’s have those loans go directly to the students. That will save us billions of dollars; that will pay for every single dime of the program that I just talked about. That’s the kind of change you can believe in. That’s what we’ve got to do, but I’m going to need all of you to work.

    Thank you, everybody. God bless you. (Applause.)

    END
    7:01 P.M. EST

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Statement by Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer on the Employm

    02.05.10 06:38 AM

    The statement below was posted on www.WhiteHouse.gov by the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer in response to the January employment report. The statement can also be accessed HERE.

    On the Employment Situation in January

    Posted by Christina Romer on February 05, 2010 at 09:30 AM EST

    While unemployment remains a severe problem, today’s employment report contains encouraging signs of gradual labor market healing. The unemployment rate fell three-tenths of a percentage point and employment rose in a number of industries, though overall employment fell slightly.

    The unemployment rate declined from 10.0 percent to 9.7 percent. This decline occurred despite a modest rise in the labor force. The broadest measure of the unemployment rate, which includes all persons marginally attached to the labor force and workers working part time for economic reasons, fell almost a full percentage point. Obviously, the unemployment rate remains unacceptably high, and is even worse for certain demographic groups such as teenagers and black or African American workers.

    Overall payroll employment declined 20,000 in December. This total reflects substantial variation across industries. Employment in manufacturing rose for the first time since January 2007, led by an increase in employment in motor vehicles and parts. Employment also rose in retail trade and in temporary help employment. Employment fell, however, in construction and state and local government.

    Even as today’s numbers contain signs of the beginning of recovery, they are also a reminder of how far we still have to go to return the economy to robust health and full employment. Indeed, with the benchmark revision announced today, we now know that the total job loss over the recession was more than 1 million larger than previously estimated. That is why at the same time that he released a plan for reining in the budget deficit over the medium and long run, the President has called on Congress to enact responsible, targeted actions to jump-start job creation. His proposals for a small business jobs and wages tax cut and a new program to encourage small business lending are important steps to help the businesses that are essential to robust job creation. Today’s numbers showing continued decline in construction and state and local government employment emphasize the importance of two other of the President’s priorities—continued infrastructure investment and additional aid for strapped state and local governments.

    There will likely be bumps in the road ahead. The monthly employment and unemployment numbers are volatile and subject to substantial revision. Therefore, it is important not to read too much into any one monthly report, positive or negative. It is essential that we continue our efforts to move in the right direction and replace job losses with robust job gains.

    Christina Romer is Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Infiniti FX Limited Edition

    Inifiniti acaba de presentar una edición limitada de su Infiniti FX disponibles sólo para el mercado europeo. Sólo serán fabricadas 100 unidades de las cuales 10 serán destinadas a España. Esta versión destaca por el color blanco “Moonlight White” de la carrocería y sus llantas de 21 pulgadas de color gris “Graphite“.

    Infiniti FX Limited Edition

    En el interior nos encontramos con numerosos acabados en fibra de carbono. En el ámbito de la motorización, tenemos a nuestra disposición un motor V6 de 3.7 litros y 320 CV o un V8 de 5 litros y 390 CV.

    Su precio apróximado es de 76.250€ para la versión del motor V6 y de 87.910€ para la V8.

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    1. Maserati GranTurismo S MC Sport Line Limited Edition
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    3. Infiniti G37 2010
  • Two-day professional bull riding championships at Sears Centre

    John Braska is excited about his trip to the Chicago area the first weekend in February.

    Braska is from Western Michigan. He rides bulls for a living, and his venture to Illinois is a business trip — the 26-year-old will be riding for his first Professional Championship Bullriders title in his fourth trip to the season-ending event.

    The two-night PCB Finale begins at 7:30 p.m. both Friday and Saturday at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates.

    It features the top 35 bull riders in the association who have earned the right to play for the biggest pay of the season by the quality of their riding throughout the 2009-10 season.

    Tickets are on sale at the arena or through Ticketmaster.

    While still relatively young, Braska has been all business for quite some time.

    “The first time you ride a bull, you can’t remember anything,” Braska said. “There’s so much adrenaline and it goes so fast that it overwhelms you.

    “I’ve been doing this so long that I rely on my memory muscle and my ability. You don’t really have time to think about things. You just try to make moves with the animal.”

    Braska hopes to close the season in a familiar, yet fine fashion. He won the season opener in Toledo, Ohio, and there’s plenty at stake when he wraps his hand to the backs of bulls inside the Sears Centre.

    He knows the dangers and excitement that come with the sport of bull riding, and he’s willing to take the risks in order to reap the rewards.

    “I’ve had some unspeakable injuries,” Braska said. “One of the toughest was when I broke my jaw. I got plates on both sides of my jaw, screws. It was pretty rough, and I had to eat oatmeal for six weeks.

    “But in this sport, you’ve got to keep riding unless both legs and both arms are broke. It’s a job, and the only way you get paid is to ride your bulls, whether you’re hurt or not.”

    He’ll be testing his mettle against the top cowboys in the PCB. Braska comes to Chicagoland with a $1,600 lead over the field.

    But it’s not just a bull riding. After Friday’s performance, country artist Jake Owen (2009’s “Easy Does It”) will put on a concert.

    On Saturday night, Equine Extremist Tommie Turvey will showcase his extraordinary skills, right alongside some of the best athletes in the business.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.


  • Cop from North Aurora charged with dealing drugs from squad car

    A North Aurora man who works as a police sergeant in LaSalle County has been accused of dealing marijuana out of his squad car, according to police.

    Sergio J. Fuentes, 41, of the 1500 block of West Mooseheart Road, was arrested Jan. 29 and charged with official misconduct and unlawful possession of a controlled substance.

    Authorities said Fuentes, a sergeant with the Earlville Police Department, used his cruiser while he was on duty to deliver cannabis to someone working with the Tri-County Drug Enforcement Narcotics Team.

    After returning to the police station, searches turned up more marijuana in the officer’s personal vehicle as well as Clonazepam, a prescription medication used to treat seizure disorders and panic attacks, in a bag in his cruiser, officials said.

    If convicted of official misconduct, a Class 3 felony, Fuentes would face up to five years in prison. He also stands to lose his badge and pension.

    Earlville Mayor Mike Hall said Fuentes has been a local police officer for a little more than three years. He has been suspended without pay and could face termination at a formal disciplinary hearing expected to take place next week, the mayor said.

    “From my previous knowledge of him, I was stunned by the accusations,” Hall said. “He responded the day my mother-in-law died and assisted with CPR.”

    Earlville is about 30 miles west of Yorkville. The estimated population is 1,822, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.