Category: News

  • Alfa Romeo coming to US: Giulia, MiTo, Giulietta, a new spider, two SUVs on the way

    We’re slowly getting more information on Fiat Group’s role here in the United States as Sergio Marchionne reveals his 5-year business plan for the Italian automaker today in Turin, Italy. Following the Fiat 500 later this year, Marchionne says that Fiat’s Alfa Romeo brand will come to the stateside by 2012.

    Leading the charge will be three new models, a midsize SUV, a sedan and a station wagon (both called the Giulia). The Alfa Romeo Giulia will replace the current 159 sedan. The SUV will be based on a Chrysler product – either the Dodge Journey or the new 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee.

    A year after that (in 2013), Alfa Romeo will add the 5-door MiTo hatchback and a new Spider, a small convertible. Both of those will be followed by the new Giulietta hatchback and larger SUV in 2014.

    We’re looking forward to Alfa’s return.

    Click through for Fiat’s official chart.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: KickingTires


  • “The Future of Cuba, Cuban-Americans, and the U.S. Government: Reconciliation or War Crime Tribunals and Property Restitution?”

    “The Future of Cuba, Cuban-Americans,

    and the U.S. Government:
    Reconciliation or War Crime Tribunals and Property Restitution?”

    with

    Jorge I. Dominguez

    and

    Anita Snow

    Date: May 4, 2010

    Time: 4-6 PM

    Where: CGIS Building, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs,

    1737 Cambridge Street, Room N-354*, Cambridge MA

    Contact Chair: Donna Hicks ([email protected]).

    *Please note this event is not in the usual room.

    Speaker Bios

    Jorge I. Domínguez is Antonio Madero Professor of Mexican and Latin American Politics and Economics, vice provost for international affairs, special advisor for international studies to the dean of the faculty of arts and sciences, and chairman of the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies. He is the author or co-author of various books, among them “La política exterior de Cuba, 1962-2009″; “Consolidating Mexico’s Democracy: The 2006 Presidential Campaign in Comparative Perspective”; “The United States and Mexico: Between Partnership and Conflict, 2nd ed.”; “Constructing Democratic Governance in Latin America, 3rd ed.”; “The Construction of Democracy: Lessons from Practice and Research”; “Cuba hoy: Analizando su pasado, imaginando su futuro”; “Between Compliance and Conflict: East Asia, Latin America, and the “New” Pax Americana”; “The Cuban Economy at the Start of the Twenty-First Century”; “Democratic Politics in Latin America and the Caribbean”; “Technopols: Freeing Politics and Markets in Latin America in the 1990s”; “To Make a World Safe for Revolution: Cuba’s Foreign Policy”; “Economic Issues and Political Conflict: U.S.-Latin American Relations”, and many articles on domestic and international politics in Latin America and the Caribbean.

    A past president of the Latin American Studies Association and a past board chairman of the Latin American Scholarship Program of American Universities, he currently serves on the editorial boards of “Political Science Quarterly”, “Foreign Affairs en español”, “Cuban Studies”, “Foro internacional”, and “Istor” and is a contributing editor to “Foreign Policy”. He was series editor for the Peabody Award-winning Public Broadcasting System television series “Crisis in Central America”. His current research focuses on the international relations and domestic politics of Latin American countries. For more information, visit http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~jidoming

    Anita Snow is a 2010 Nieman fellow and a veteran journalist who has spent most of her career working for The Associated Press in Latin America. Before coming to Cambridge last year, she was the AP’s bureau chief in Havana for a decade, single-handedly opening the office in 1999 after the news organization’s 30-year absence from the island. In Cuba, she covered stories including the custody fight over Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez, who was rescued at sea off the coast of Florida after a boat wreck, and the illness and eventual resignation of leader Fidel Castro. Previously, Snow worked for the AP in Mexico and Central America for more than six years.

    About the Herbert C. Kelman Seminar Series

    The 2009-2010 Herbert C. Kelman Seminar on International Conflict Analysis and Resolution series is sponsored by the Program on Negotiation, the Nieman Foundation for Journalism, the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics, and Public Policy, The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, and the MIT-Harvard Public Disputes Program, as well as Boston area members of the Alliance for Peacebuilding. The theme for this year’s Kelman Seminar is “Reconciliation: Coming together after the shooting stops”.

  • IEA leads the way in SOS rally, march

    Nearly 5,000 IEA members from throughout Illinois were in Springfield Wednesday, among the estimated 15 thousand participants in what might have been the biggest-ever State Capitol rally of its type.  (see rally and march photos)

    The Save Our Schools/Save Our State (SOS) rally, sponsored by the Responsible Budget Coalition (RBC), sought to convince lawmakers to act to end the state budget crisis. State government is facing a shortfall of $13 billion. It is estimated as many as 20,000 education employees will be laid off this August, causing larger class sizes, the elimination of music, arts and sports programs in many districts and an overall decline in education quality statewide.

    “We have a crisis that is on the brink of becoming a tragedy” said IEA President Ken Swanson. “The legislature must act now.”

    The best solution is for the Illinois House to pass HB 174, or something like it, which would provide a comprehensive tax reform measure. HB 174 cleared the Illinois Senate last spring but has not been voted on in the House.

    “It will take revenue to save our schools and save our state,” Swanson said. “Our message to lawmakers is they must end the bad behavior that led to this crisis and address the revenue needs of the state.”

    # # #

  • UPDATE: CBC budget cuts

    Published April 20, 2010
    President Rich Cummins, KONA Radio 

    Play Audio
    Part l:  Braced for Future Cuts / Preserving Daily Mission of the College (3:06 min)
    Part ll:  Don’t Starve the Solution  (2:11 min)
    Part lll:  Current and Future Impact  (2:30 min)

    KONA:  …for now you’re looking at about a $1.6 million cut in the budget.  How soon do you think you’ll finish the work on that?

    Cummins:  I’ve had a committee working on it with me for the last several months.  We knew that a big cut was coming.  We weren’t sure about what the number would be because the Senate and the House versions varied very dramatically.  Unfortunately, it landed on the Senate side of the spectrum and we’ll be taking more cuts than we hoped for.  …that committee concluded it’s work on Friday and is sending me some recommendations that I’ll consider–that I’ll add and subtract from.  And within the next three weeks I’ll be moving to make those cuts.

  • National Astronomy Day Festivities at Moore Observatory

    NEWS RELEASE
    April 21, 2010                                                             Contact: Frank Murray, 542-4835

    Day and night activities are planned at Moore Observatory at Columbia Basin College Saturday, April 24 in celebration of National Astronomy Day.

    Viewing will begin at 6 p.m. with solar observation from a variety of solar telescopes provided by CBC and the Tri-City Astronomy Club. Guests will be invited to view the sun and sunspots.

    In addition, videos will be shown inside the observatory of various galactic phenomenons.

    Public star gazing will begin at about 8 p.m. through the Moore Observatory’s 16-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope. Everyone is welcome to attend and there is no admission charge. The Moore Observatory is located in the northwest corner of the CBC Pasco campus.

  • ‘Inside Islam: What a Billion Muslims Really Think’

    NEWS RELEASE
    April 21, 2010                                                          Contact: Erica Jesberger, 544-4916

    The documentary Inside Islam: What a Billion Muslims Really Think will be shown at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 27 in the Gjerde Center on the Columbia Basin College Pasco campus.

    After the film, a panel of Muslim professionals from the Tri-Cities will comment on the film and answer audience questions.

    Focused on the issues of terrorism, democracy, and gender justice, the film challenges the popular notion that Muslims and the West are on a collision course and instead highlights a shared relationship that is based on facts, not fear. The film asks questions on many Americans’ minds: Why is there so much anti-Americanism in the Muslim world? Who are the extremists and how do Muslims feel about them? What do Muslims like and dislike about the West? What do Muslim women really want?
     
    Inside Islam: What a Billion Muslims Really Think runs 55 minutes. This free public showing is sponsored by the CBC Reads committee, the Office of Diversity, and the Associated Students of CBC.

  • Map Of The Day: In Case You Had Any Doubt Where The World’s Growth Was Coming From

    The IMF has released their report on the world economy, and while the recovery is robust worldwide, you can tell quite easily that this is all about emerging markets growth.

    Emerging Markets Map

    Now check out the details of the world recovery >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Gig With White House Folks, Then Jail Time

     

    Surveillance video on Apr. 8

     

    Three weeks after he and dozens of others, including top-ranking Obama administration officials, spoke in the nation’s capital about building a brighter future for Americans, 20-year-old Demarco Scott robbed an electronics store at gunpoint, according to local police and officials.

    Scott, a Washington, D.C., resident, expressed regret to his victims as he robbed them, documents filed by police in federal court said.

    The month before, he had been a “student presenter” during a conference aimed at tackling issues such as job creation and economic stability, transportation and infrastructure, and housing stabilization in cities and towns across the country.

    Scott was asked to describe his experience with a new city-sponsored internship program, which places “underserved young adults” into five-month apprenticeships across Washington, and teaches them resume-writing and job-interviewing skills.

    “It’s a pretty good program,” Scott said in a halting voice, at first sounding unsure of himself as he addressed a session of the National League of Cities’ 2010 Congressional City Conference. “We have a lot of young adults in the program, and it’s like the program is there to help to try to get people a career … to better their future.”

    The conference, held over three days in the middle of March, featured mayors from across the country and several Obama administration officials, including White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett, Transportation Secretary Ray Lahood, Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke.

    Around that same time, Scott was allegedly participating in a gun-wielding robbery spree across the nation’s capital.

    Between March and April, he carried out armed robberies of a Subway sandwich shop, a liquor store and a carry-out restaurant, according to court documents filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

    On April 8, shortly after noon, he entered a Game Stop electronics and video store in northeast Washington and pulled out a silver handgun, court documents said.

    “You’ll know what this is,” he allegedly said, adding, “So you know I’m not playing.”

    After two employees in the store handed him $564 in cash, he said, “I’m in a real bad jam, and I hope you don’t lose your jobs over this.”

    The incident was captured on surveillance video.

    Police in the neighborhood distributed a flyer featuring the suspect’s picture, and 11 days after the robbery Scott was arrested.

    According to court documents, Scott admitted to robbing the Game Stop and the other locations in Washington.

    “Scott explained that the reason he robbed the [Game Stop] was because his brother was in trouble and needed money,” according to a summary of the case filed in court by a local detective.

    Scott has been charged with armed robbery, and he is currently being held without bond, pending a detention hearing set for May 4.

    According to Scott’s own statements at the conference in Washington, trying to help someone in need is nothing new for him. But it’s unclear if doing so in a potentially criminal manner is new for him.

    When Scott was accepted into the youth internship program, which is run by the D.C. government and funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, he was living in an independent living facility and serving one year’s probation for an unidentified offense, according to a source familiar with the situation.

    Scott learned about the internship program through a social worker, and, with an interest in nursing, he was placed in the “recreation department” of a nursing home, he told conference attendees in a session titled “Putting People To Work.”

    In fact, he said, he hopes for a long-term career in the nursing field.

    “I kind of enjoyed working with the residents and the elderly people,” said Scott, who was paid $8.25 an hour for his work. “It’s just basically interacting with the residents at the nursing home and getting them to feel comfortable meeting new people, and basically feeling how it was when they were young.”

    He said he also tried to help his unemployed friends by persuading them to apply for the internship program.

    “Some people [have] never been on a job interview before,” he said. “[The program organizers] try to teach us how it is in the real world when you go to a job place. … The program is for career training, for our future, in the long run.”

    But his friends missed the deadline to sign up, he said.

    As for himself, he hoped the nursing home would officially hire him after the internship ended in late March. After all, he said, “Everybody likes me.”

    Scott became a participant in the National League of Cities conference after being offered by an official with D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty’s office, which oversees the internship program, a spokesman for the National League of Cities said.

    The spokesman declined to comment further.

    An email and a phone call to a public defender representing Scott were not returned.

    (To see video of Scott’s remarks at the National League of Cities conference, click here: http://www.nlctv.org/events/ccc2010/100313/default.cfm?id=12163&type=flv&test=0&live=0)

  • Knome Gets $5M From bioMérieux

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Knome, a Cambridge, MA-based genomics sequencing and analysis company, received $5 million from France’s bioMérieux in exchange for an equity stake. It’s part of a partnership deal in which the French company will use Knome’s technology to develop in vitro diagnostics for cancer and infectious diseases, the companies announced today. As part of the deal, bioMérieux will appoint its CEO Stéphane Bancel as a director on the Knome board. Ryan profiled Knome in January.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Toyota FT-86 development cost may increase price of production model

    Even though the Toyota FT-86 is more than a year away from going sale, insiders say that development costs of the Toyota/Subaru mash-up vehicle will result in a more expensive product than originally estimated. When the Toyota FT-86 Concept made its debut at the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show, the automaker’s executives said that they are aiming for an entry-level price of around $20,000.

    Sources say that the research and development team is now focused on increasing fuel-economy and is working to produce the cleanest engine possible. That could force the price of the Toyota FT-86 to $23,000, with the range-topper model hitting a little above $26,000.

    The Toyota FT-86 is expected to enter production at the end of 2011, followed shortly by Subaru’s version.

    Click here for more news on the Toyota FT-86 Concept.

    Refresher: Inspired by the sporty 1980s Corolla AE86, the production version of the FT-86 is reported to be powered by a 200-hp 2.0L boxer Subaru engine sending power to the rear-wheels. Prices are set to start above $20,000.

    Toyota FT-86 Concept:

    Toyota FT-86 Concept Toyota FT-86 Concept Toyota FT-86 Concept Toyota FT-86 Concept

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • Cooling Down Heat Islands in Your Neighborhood Cuts Energy Costs

    This coming weekend, my fellow students and I will be on the National Mall in Washington, DC to exhibit our award-winning P3 (People, Prosperity, and the Planet) project—developing white, reflective roof coatings.

    Our research aims to develop new materials for building surfaces that have low solar gain—surfaces that do not absorb much of the sun’s energy. The ultimate goal is to understand how to develop common building materials that exhibit low solar gain characteristics.

    The roof coatings we’ve been developing are designed to reflect visible and infrared radiation, cutting down on heat gain, which in turn would cut energy costs and mitigate the “heat island effect” that makes urban areas significantly hotter than nearby rural areas.

    Heat islands pose an increasing risk to the environment and contribute to higher energy costs in urban centers, especially during peak demand times.

    It is especially important that city planners and municipalities understand how the balance between built surfaces and vegetation can achieve a lower heat “footprint.” Then, they can use zoning laws, which have the power to affect building practices across the country, to prevent the heat island effect. I’d like to see zoning laws updated to account for energy and environmental factors—such as heat islands—rather than for form and appearance. My team’s research could help inform such innovative zoning laws.

    Our work with roof coatings and the Drexel Smart House aims to provide information and potential strategies for mitigating heat islands through alternative roofing systems such as cool roofs and green roofs,  (which have the added benefit of reducing storm water runoff, too).

    About the author: Eric Eisele is a graduate student studying Materials Science and Engineering at Drexel University, and is a member of a P3 Phase II research team developing cool roof coatings. Eric and his team will be at the National Sustainable Design Expo and P3 Award Competition in Washington, DC on April 24-25.

    Editors Note: Come see this and other innovative designs for a sustainable future at the 6th Annual National Sustainable Design Expo on the National Mall, April 24 -25.
    For more information and directions

  • Eat Your Double Down At the KFC Yum! Center

    Sick of hearing about the KFC Double Down yet? If you’re not, and you live in KFC’s home town of Louisville, KY, you’ll soon be able to order one — and pretty much anything else from KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut — in the KFC Yum! Center, a $238 million, 22,000-seat facility scheduled to open in November. Louisville-based Yum! Brands, parent to KFC and its brandmates, paid $13.5 million for naming rights to the stadium.

    The new arena will be home to the University of Louisville’s basketball teams, and will host other events. Business First of Louisville reports that the 10-year contract also gives Yum the right to open seven concessions throughout the arena, which will feature KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut products.

    Yum will also get “prominent exterior signage on each side of the building and on the arena roof” and “other benefits, such as a double center-court suite, digital messaging rights, an interior signage package and premium hospitality options.” Yum apparently will not have an option to rename the Louisville Cardinals or replace the team’s logo with a picture of Colonel Sanders.

    Yum! Brands buys naming rights to downtown Louisville arena [Business First of Louisville]

  • Minnesota Broadband Bill on the way to the Governor

    A super quick update

    Today the Minnesota House reports that they concurred and re-passed the Minnesota Broadband bill. The Bill was re-passed as amended by the Senate. It’s on the way to the Governor’s office but I don’t have any word on when he will be looking at it.

  • News From The World Of Medicine

    Quick update- Fearless Leader has made it out of surgery and is doing well.

    Hopes are that he’ll be home later today, and will be on the sidelines covering practice tomorrow.

    Continued well wishes for recovery are appreciated- drop him a line over at facebook.

  • It’s Not Even Out Yet: Toyota reportedly upping price on FT-86

    Filed under: ,

    Toyota FT-86 Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Toyota touts its hotly anticipated FT-86 coupe as a quick, light and attractive sports car for the masses. One of its strongest selling points is a price tag that reportedly hovering somewhere around $20,000 in base form, making the rear-drive coupe an affordable option for cash-strapped enthusiasts.

    However, a report from Autocar claims that higher than expected development costs could derail any dreams of a good looking, inexpensive FT-86. The British site sites unnamed Toyota sources as saying that the base price of the little coupe has shot from £13,000 ($20,000 in U.S. funds) to £15,000 ($23,000 U.S.), with a range-topper coming in at £17,000 ($26,000 U.S.). Further, Autocar reports that Toyota sports vehicle department head Tetsuya Tada says that the company has increased the targeted FT-86 age group has been bumped by a full 10 years from the 30s to the 40s.

    If the report turns out to be true, we’re sure there will be more than a few disappointed enthusiasts out there. But if Toyota still delivers on the attractive, lightweight, rear driver, we’re sure we can find it in our hearts to forgive an extra few thousand green-backs.

    [Source: Autocar]

    It’s Not Even Out Yet: Toyota reportedly upping price on FT-86 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 13:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Kelly Clarkson Speaks Out On Indonesia Smoking Debate

    Kelly Clarkson is responding to the public outcry over her upcoming Indonesia concert sponsored by Asian cigarette brand L.A. Lights. Kelly will be performing the world’s fourth most populous nation on April 29, and some anti-smoking proponents believe the former American Idol’s affiliate with the tobacco firm is encouraging a hazardous system that allows tobacco companies virtual free rein to peddle their products to Indonesians, via movies to sports sponsorships. and television shows.

    Clarkson’s controversy comes two years after Alicia Keys objected to a similar tobacco-fuelled sponsorship deal in Indonesia. A. Keys demanded that the cigarette logos be removed from all ads promoting her Jakarta concert, and US-based anti-smoking groups want Kelly to do the same.

    In a message to fans posted on her blog Wednesday, Kelly voiced her displeasure with the cigarette company’s sponsorship of her show, but added that she was unknown of the arrangement. Kelly says the situation is now out or her hands.

    “So ….my morning began with finding out that I am all over billboards, tv ads, and other media formats along side a tobacco company who unbeknownst to me is sponsoring my Jakarta date on my current tour. I was not made aware of this and am in no way an advocate or an ambassador for youth smoking. I’m not even a smoker, nor have I ever been. Unfortunately, my only option at this point was to cancel the show in order to stop the sponsorship,” she wrote.

    “However, I can’t justify penalizing my fans for someone else’s oversight. This is a lose-lose situation for me and I am not happy about it but the damage has been done and I refuse to cancel on my fans. I think the hardest part of situations like this is getting personally attacked for something I was completely unaware of and being used as some kind of political pawn.”

    Indonesisa remains one of the last holdouts that has not signed the World Health Organization’s tobacco treaty.


  • Yesterday’s blog highlights

    Climate Progress reports on a new poll which shows that Latinos and African Americans support a bipartisan climate and clean energy bill. “Overwhelming majorities of Latino voters in Florida (80%), Nevada (67%) and Colorado (58%) say they are more likely to vote for a U.S. Senate candidate that supports proposals for fighting global warming.”

    Carol Browner, White House climate advisor, said the “administration backs protecting energy-intensive manufacturing sectors in climate legislation,” according to E2 Wire.

    On Treehugger, we learned that the solar industry created 17,000 US jobs in 2009, according to a new report released by the Solar Energies Industry Association.

  • Marchionne lashes out at critics, calls them “fundamentally offensive”

    During his presentation of Fiat Group’s 5-year business plan, Sergio Marchionne, who is also CEO of Chrysler Group LLC, lashed out at critics who say his companies are not addressing the flaws of their business. Marchionne called critics “fundamentally offensive,” “based on absolute hogwash” and “wholly unjustified.”

    “I will not accept the criticism that does not recognize the work that has been done by Chrysler and this house,” he said.

    Marchionne’s comments came after auto analyst Max Warburton, of Bernstein Research in London, said Chrysler may not survive in its current form even after posting an “astonishing” profit in March.

    Marchionne acknowledged that there many skeptics may have “some level of doubt” about the ambitions of his plan, which promises to make both Fiat and Chrysler into solidly profitable within five years.

    “We need to find a permanent fix to the way this business is run,” he said, adding that the alliance with Chrysler is key to that. “Without Chrysler, (Fiat’s) future would be completely different. I think we have to admit it would have been a marginal player for the rest of its life.”

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Detroit News


  • FRC Presents List Of 20 ‘Target Congressional Races’ In November

    FRC presents list of 20 'target congressional races' in November Just days after Tea Party leaders announced their "targets" ahead of the midterm elections, a socially conservative organization has followed suit, singling out members of Congress who supported the healthcare overhaul to be voted out of office.

    Family Research Council (FRC) Action PAC announced plans to raise and spend $500,000 to target the districts of 20 Democratic incumbents who voted for President Obama’s healthcare bill. The organization’s representatives allege that these lawmakers, despite their professed pro-life orientation, supported a bill that allows federal money to fund abortion services.

    "As pro-life and pro-family voters, we must work together to change the Congress, state governments and ultimately the White House in 2012," said Connie Mackey, president of FRC Action PAC.

    She added that her organization has spent time researching the most vulnerable races and "will have pro-life, pro-family candidates [ready] to fill the void."

    Among those singled out for defeat in November, FRC Action PAC listed Representative Paul Kanjorski from the 11th district in Pennsylvania, Tom Perriello (Va., 5th) and Ann Kirkpatrick (Ariz., 1st).
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