Category: News

  • New York Times volvería al pago en internet con un modelo a lo Financial Times

    Times Reader

    Si el New York Magazine está en lo cierto, en las próximas semanas vamos a tener anuncio de regreso al pago por la versión de internet del New York Times. ¿Qué cambian respecto al antiguo modelo del que dieron marcha atrás? Esta vez no se trataría de una versión completamente cerrada, sino de una estrategia similar a la de Financial Times: para cada usuario hay una cierta cantidad de artículos accesibles al día o al mes; una vez superada esta cifra, el resto es de pago.

    NYT lleva mucho tiempo especulando con su regreso al cobro por acceso como una forma de mejorar los ingresos en al red, y lo que hagan va a ser muy relevante por el liderazgo que ejercen en el resto del sector. En contraposición a las ideas de Murdoch, NYT apunta a que pague el lector final más que los nuevos intermediarios y busca un equilibrio entre visibilidad (en buscadores, enlaces) y sumar ingresos a los que obtiene por publicidad. New York Magazine también apunta a que con el presunto tablet de Apple podría haber un acuerdo de contenidos, de forma que se cobrase por nuevas experiencias y no sólo por el contenido de siempre. 2010 va a ser un año en el que muchos medios tradicionales van a intentar resolver la ecuación entre tráfico, ingresos publicitarios, costes altos y pérdida de visibilidad si empiezan a cobrar en contraposición a posibles ingresos sin la certeza de que esa fórmula exista.


  • THE MOTOR REPORT: BYD May Be Australia’s Second Chinese Carmaker: Report

    Jan 18th, 2010


    AUSTRALIA MAY SOON have a second Chinese carmaker entering the local market. News from Detroit this week suggests that China’s BYD is investigating its options here.

    With sales of over 450,000 cars in 2009, the Chinese carmaker is aiming for 800,000 sales in 2010. Speaking at Detroit, BYD’s exports boss Henri Li told press that BYD could arrive in Australia in two to three years.

    Mr Li said that BYD is in early discussion with potential importers, but that the lack of right-hand-drive models in the company’s line-up will delay its aspirations in the Australian market until around 2012 or 2013.

    Founded in 2003, BYD includes US investor Warren Buffet among its investors, the American injecting around $247 million into the company in 2009.

    Speaking with Fortune magazine last year, Buffet described BYD’s founder Wang Chuan-Fu as a combination of Thomas Edison and Fortune’s “Manager of the Century”: former GE boss Jack Welch.

    “[He is] something like Edison in solving technical problems, and something like Welch in getting done what he needs to do. I have never seen anything like it,” Buffet said.

    In January last year, BYD unveiled the F3DM hybrid, powered by a 1.0 litre petrol engine and an electric motor. With a combined output of 124kW and 400Nm of torque, BYD claims the F3DM can achieve a driving range of around 580km.

    BYD is not without its critics however. The company has been derided in the past for producing vehicles styled closely on the looks of models from manufacturers such as Mercedes-Benz and Toyota.

    The first Chinese carmaker to launch in Australia is Great Wall Motors, which introduced its X240 SUV and SA220 commercial utes locally last year.

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  • When Disaster Strikes the Capital [3]

    Above: The Presidential Palace in Port-au-Prince, after and before. Credit: Lisandro Suero

    Here’s how former U.S. President Bill Clinton, in an interview with Esquire, summed up the state of governance in Haiti after last week’s earthquake:

    The UN was, in effect, decapitated. The Haitian government was disabled by the destruction of the presidential palace and the president’s offices, and the parliamentary building. There are senior parliamentarians still missing. Members of the cabinet still missing. The prime minister and the president are fine, and they’re setting up shop around the airport. And the U.S. has given them communications equipment.

    Haiti’s one small bit of luck at this miserable time is the readiness of the United States, among other countries, to jump to the rescue. The situation of Port-au-Prince at this moment is similar to that of New Orleans in late August and early September 2005: the local authorities were instantly overwhelmed by the disaster, leaving the U.S. federal government to step in.

    So what happens when the U.S. federal government itself is the victim of catastrophe and “decapitation”? That’s what we ought to expect in the event of National Planning Scenario #1, a 10-kiloton nuclear ground burst in Washington, DC. With the heart of the federal city in ruins, the U.S. government will have to pull itself up by the bootstraps. So who’s going to lead?

    The Haitian case suggests that who lives or dies under these sorts of circumstances is a matter of chance. As mentioned above, President Rene Préval survived the earthquake, although he’s been scarce. Much more damaging to the relief effort was the loss of the top UN officials in Haiti, whose bodies were pulled from the rubble of the Christopher Hotel on Saturday.

    So let’s ask, what happens if the President of the U.S. were killed or incapacitated in a citywide disaster of similar magnitude? If this event were to happen tomorrow, Vice President Joe Biden would take over. Unless he had suffered a similar fate, or could not be found — in which case, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi would take the oath of office. Unless she, too, could not be found, which brings us to the President of the Senate Pro Tempore, the Honorable Robert C. Byrd. Here’s the gentleman from West Virginia in a picture from last May:

    By longstanding Senate tradition, the ceremonial role of President pro Tempore is bestowed upon the member of the majority party with the longest tenure in office. Over the last several years, that’s often been either Sen. Byrd — who has now served longer than any other Senator in the history of the institution — or the late Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, who celebrated his 100th birthday while in office.

    Leadership is pretty important in times of crisis. Given the advanced age and uncertain condition of the most senior Senators, the current setup gives Murphy’s Law too much of an opportunity to parlay a grand national tragedy into a threat to the constitutional form of government itself. One way or another, that really ought to change.

  • Personal navigation devices heading for ubiquity

    Personal navigation devices heading for ubiquity

    With the continued proliferation of auto satnav, handheld Personal Navigation Devices (PNDs) and mobile phone navigational functionality, consumers are being offered ever more choice in the way they experience navigation and location-based information. Hence it was interesting to see the penetration of navigation technologies into the population when digital map provider Navteq released excerpts from its global research recently. In 2009, roughly half of all people in mature markets such as US, UK, France and Germany had used navigation devices – roughly double the number from 2006. The research also concluded that mobile consumers are very interested in pedestrian navigation too. The time is unquestionably near when we’ll all be reliant on our handheld devices for finding our way around…

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  • Hiện tượng hiếm trên toàn thế giới và cả VN : miếng ăn là miếng nhục

    Văn hóa Hà Thành càng lúc càng quái đản , coi mà bực. Bây giờ lại còn sinh ra loại người thích bị sỉ nhục để được ăn .

    http://vietnamnet.vn/bvkh/daynong/20…ng-vui-890074/

    Mua hàng ‘ăn chửi’… vẫn vui

    Có những khách đến quán chửi để… vui, được vừa ăn vừa xem "biểu diễn". Có ông chủ bộc bạch: “Khách quen bị chửi rồi, giờ đổi ra tử tế có khi lại phá sản”.

    Bán hàng chửi


    Người Hà Nội vẫn thường hay nhắc đến chuyện bún mắng, cháo chửi để nói về một kiểu bán hàng kỳ lạ có một không hai này trên thế giới. Quán bún canh dọc mùng nổi tiếng ngon với món lưỡi, sườn, giò heo chấm xì dầu, cạnh chợ Ngô Sĩ Liên (Hà Nội) ít khi ngớt tiếng léo nhéo chua loét của bà chủ ngoài 50. Mỗi câu hỏi của khách là một cơ hội cho bà… "xả giận".

    Khách mới dừng xe trước quán hỏi: "Chị ơi, để xe ở đâu?". Bà đốp ngay vào mặt: "Để lên nóc nhà này này!". Một thực khách gọi rau sống đến lần thứ 3, bị bà chồm qua bàn bán hàng quát với vào nhà: "Đây không có rau, tự trồng mà ăn!". Nếu khách giục nhanh lên, lúc đó sẽ là: “Làm đ. gì mà phải giục rối cả lên!” hay “Không có 10 tay nhá!”… Thậm chí có cô gái gọi món thỏ thẻ, nhẹ nhàng quá cũng bị chửi: “Mẹ! Điệu chảy nước ra”.



    Quán bún chửi ở Ngô Sỹ Liên



    Kiểu bán hàng chửi khách như thế này tập trung khá nhiều ở Hà Nội. Người bán thì luôn miệng mắng, khách thì nhẫn nhục ăn chẳng dám nói câu nào.


    Có quán cơm bình dân, khách đến ăn đông, chủ yếu là những người lao động nghèo. Trưa nào người dân trong ngõ cũng nghe thấy bà bán hàng mắng khách hàng như… mắng con. Khách vào quán đi dép đầy vôi vữa, bà quát: "Thằng kia, chân bẩn như… lợn, rửa đi", gọi món ăn chọn lâu thì bị mắng: "Ăn thì ăn, không ăn thì… biến", trả tiền nát là bị nói ngay: "tiền gì mà như giấy chùi….". Ấy là chưa kể, vừa ngồi ăn, vừa nghe bà chủ chửi người giúp việc oang oang.


    Chuyện chửi khách không chỉ diễn ra ở những quán nổi tiếng có món ăn ngon, điều ngạc nhiên là nó cũng xuất hiện ở ngay cả những quán hàng chẳng phải nổi tiếng gì. Một quán ăn sáng ở phố Yên Phụ, có quy định rất kỳ quái, khách gọi gì cũng phải chờ 15 phút. Có một đám khách vào gọi bánh mì ốpla, không thấy nhà hàng đả động, tưởng bị quên, khách nhắc. Tay phục vụ không thèm nhìn khách, liền nói: “Đợi 15 phút!”. Chờ 10 phút sau, khách lại gọi tay nhân viên nọ. Anh ta cộc lốc: “Mới 14 phút!”. “Ốp quả trứng thì hai phút chứ mấy!”. “Ở đây quy định gọi gì cũng 15 phút”. “Trời, quy định kỳ vậy?”. Gã phục vụ mặt không biến sắc, mắt không nhìn người đối thoại, vừa đi vào nhà vừa lẩm bẩm: "Không ăn thì biến"! Tất cả há hốc mồm và ngơ ngác hỏi nhau xem những câu mình vừa nghe có thật không.


    Kiểu bán hàng này đã đi ngược lại với tất cả mọi nguyên tắc trong kinh doanh là thoả mãn khách hàng tối đa, đi ngược lại với văn minh thương mại. Khách hàng là những người nuôi sống họ, vậy nhưng khách hàng đã bị đối xử tồi tệ. Người bán hàng đã thô lỗ, thiếu văn hoá nhưng cái thích thú không bình thường, sự nhẫn nhục của một số người cùng sự im lặng của các cơ quan chức năng cũng là lý do để cho kiểu bán hàng này tồn tại.


    Những loại quán hàng này tồn tại được vẫn là do sự chấp nhận của khách hàng. Với những khách hàng không chấp nhận được chuyện này thì chỉ đến 1 lần và không bao giờ quay trở lại. Chỉ có 2 kiểu người vẫn đến đây ăn. Thứ nhất đó là những người quan niệm rằng những chủ quán và người phục vụ ở những địa chỉ kinh doanh, dịch vụ kể trên có thô lỗ thật nhưng họ lại nấu ăn ngon vì ngon nên nhẫn nhục chịu đựng vừa ăn vừa nghe chửi chỉ để được ăn ngon.


    Còn kiểu người thứ 2 là những người thích nghe chửi, thấy bị chửi thì ăn mới ngon hơn. Có người còn nói đùa rằng, đến những quán này để được… vui, nếu không được nghe chửi thì ăn mất ngon… Nghe chửi, nghe đuổi ở quán hàng giống như… vừa ăn vừa xem biểu diễn. Tiếng chửi thậm chí còn khiến đồ ăn thêm hương vị, quán thêm "phong cách" khiến người ăn nhớ rồi thành nghiện thỉnh thoảng lại qua. Có ông chủ (khi mát mình) bộc bạch: “Mình đang chửi mắng nó (khách) quen rồi, nó thích, giờ đổi ra tử tế có khi lại phá sản”.


    Quán bún chửi ở cạnh chợ Ngô Sĩ Liên đã tồn tại bao nhiêu năm nay, rất phản văn hoá và phi văn minh (trong khi thành phố Hà Nội năm nào cũng phát động phong trào văn minh thương mại) vậy mà cơ quan công quyền ở địa phương này vẫn để nguyên, coi như không có chuyện gì. Cả thời gian dài không hề răn đe, xử phạt, hay giáo dục để họ có văn hoá hơn trong bán hàng, cứ mặc người tiêu dùng bị xúc phạm.


    Doạ và đánh khách


    Nhiều khách hàng ngày nay khi đi mua hàng luôn tự nhủ thôi thì bị nó (người bán) chửi, mắng cũng đành chịu đừng để nó đánh cho thì khổ. Chuyện doạ và đánh khách hàng ở đâu hiếm chứ trên mảnh đất chúng ta sống không hề thiếu.


    Một khách hàng kể 1 buổi sáng chủ nhật rủ mấy người bạn đi ăn sáng, café xong rủ nhau đến 1 showroom ôtô nhập khẩu trên đường Láng Hạ (Hà Nội) xem xe. Hỏi nhân viên bán hàng câu gì, anh ta cũng không trả lời mà còn hỏi ngược lại những câu rất xẵng đại loại "có mua không mà hỏi". Đến khi khách bực quá mới than bán hàng mà "nhấm nhẳng như chó cắn ma" thế thì bán cho ai, lập tức nhân viên này nhảy dựng lên và doạ: "có muốn đánh nhau không thì bảo?". Khách sợ quá vội vàng lên xe bỏ chạy. Tìm hiểu ra mới biết ngày chủ nhật, ông chủ thì đi đánh golf, nhân viên muốn nghỉ nhưng cứ phải bán hàng nên tìm cách đuổi khách.
    Bị doạ đánh dẫu sao vẫn còn nhẹ, có những khách hàng bị đánh hẳn hoi và đánh tàn tệ. Mới đây chị Phan Thị Tuyết Hồng ở phường 3, thành phố Đà Lạt (Lâm Đồng) đã bị nhân viên của Công ty Bảo hiểm dầu khí khu vực Tây Nguyên, Văn phòng tại Lâm Đồng đánh trọng thương. Chị Hồng đến văn phòng Công ty Bảo hiểm dầu khí Tây Nguyên tại Lâm Đồng để yêu cầu thanh toán bảo hiểm tai nạn xe máy cho người em họ là Trịnh Xuân Lộc. Do hồ sơ đã nộp hơn 10 tháng trước, nhưng đến nay vẫn chưa được đơn vị này giải quyết bảo hiểm theo quy định, nên tại buổi làm việc đó, chị Hồng đã kiên quyết yêu cầu công ty này phải giải quyết dứt điểm. Không những không nhận được sự hợp tác giải quyết sự việc, chị Hồng còn bị nhân viên bảo hiểm Phạm Hà Thế Ngân đuổi ra khỏi công ty, ra đến cửa thì liền bị nhân viên này túm tóc và đánh tới tấp vào người.

    Những ai đã từng vào các quán cơm tù xuất hiện nhiều ở khu vực miền Trung thì không khỏi bàng hoàng bởi cách đối xử với khách hàng tại đây. Từ trên ôtô khách bị lùa vào quán từng đám như lùa vịt, rồi bắt phải mua đồ ăn với giá cắt cổ trong khi đó đồ ăn toàn những thứ ôi thiu, thối không ăn được cũng phải cố mà nuốt không thì sẽ bị đánh. Muốn ăn hay muốn bị đánh tuỳ khách chọn. Có khách hàng đã bị bọn côn đồ đánh chết bởi nhất quyết không chịu ăn đồ ăn tại quán.


    Ngay cả những nơi văn minh lịch sự có yếu tố đầu tư của nước ngoài như Siêu thị Big C Biên Hoà (Đồng Nai) thì bảo vệ ở đây vì nghi ngờ khách lấy trộm hàng cũng đã không tiếc tay đánh khách hàng đến nỗi người khách này uất ức quá phải tự vẫn nhằm bảo vệ danh dự cho mình.


    Chứng kiến cảnh bán mua như vậy, nhiều người không khỏi xót xa: Sao mà đạo đức xã hội xuống cấp? Sao mà sự tử tế, danh dự, nhân phẩm, tính mạng con người bị coi thường đến vậy? Không biết trên thế giới này, còn nơi nào có những kiểu bán hàng như ở Việt Nam?

    • Công Minh
  • One Month After Xmas…..

    ‘Twas the month after Christmas,
    and all through the house,
    Nothing would fit me,
    not even a blouse.

    The cookies I’d nibbled,
    the chocolate I’d taste
    and the holiday parties
    had gone to my waist.

    When I got on the scales
    there arose such a number!
    When I walked to the store
    (less a walk than a lumber),

    I’d remember the marvellous meals I’d prepared;
    The gravies and sauces and beef nicely rared,
    The wine and the rum balls, the bread and the cheese
    And the way I’d never said, "No thank you, please."

    As I dressed myself in my husband’s old shirt
    And prepared once again to do battle with dirt…
    I said to myself, as I only can,
    "You can’t spend a winter, disguised as a man!"

    So, away with the last of the sour cream dip.
    Get rid of the fruit cake, every cracker and chip.
    Every last bit of food that I like must be banished
    Till all the additional ounces have vanished.

    I won’t have a cookie, not even a lick.
    I’ll want only to chew on a long celery stick.
    I won’t have hot biscuits, or corn bread, or pie.
    I’ll munch on a carrot and quietly cry.

    I’m hungry, I’m lonesome, and life is a bore…
    But isn’t that what January is for?
    Unable to giggle, no longer a riot.
    Happy New Year to all, and to all a good diet.

  • Reply To Article: Met Office’s debate over longer-term forecasts by Roger Harrabin

    Article Tags: Piers Corbyn, Reply To Article

    Roger

    You write in the article

    Met Office’s debate over longer-term forecasts by Roger Harrabin, Environment analyst, BBC News

    ….And many other meteorologists mistrust Mr Corbyn himself because he refuses to publish his scientific methods. I have been asking him for several months to offer independent corroboration of his forecasting successes but none has been supplied. …..

    I find that what you write is a LIE.

    I have referred you to plenty of independent corroboration* of our forecast accuracy and successes – sources and documents available via the public link: Forecasts with proven skill

    The link refers to published independent peer-reviewed verification of the significant skill of our gale (eg) forecasts, weather bets where we consistently won money and have as a consequence had that arrangement terminated by the bookmakers, and independent assessment by a loss-adjusters of our extreme events forecasts showing high skill around the world.

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Hammacher Schlemmer introduces picture scanning digital photo frame

    Hammacher Schlemmer's photo frame/scanner converts your old photos into 300-dpi jpg images...

    While at least 48% of the US still camera market is now estimated to be digital, most people will have boxes and albums full of ‘old style’ printed photos for many years to come. One way of preserving and storing these pre-digital memories is to scan them and convert them into digital images. Hammacher Schlemmer, the company that has been offering unique gifts since 1848, has introduced a that lets you preserve and view photos ‘as easily as feeding bills into a vending machine’…

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  • SKY PALACE | Villa de las Fuentes | 53p

    SKY PALACE TOWER

    Ubicación: Localizada en uno de los puntos más elevados de la Ciudad, se convertirá en la Torre con mayor altura, a casi 268 metros sobre el nivel del Mar.
    Área Total: Apartamentos de 95m2, 125m2 y 163m2.

    __________________________________________________________________

    Descripción del Proyecto:

    Contará con 26 pisos de apartamentos, lo que lo convertirán en el Edifico más Alto de Toda la Ciudad de Panamá.
    Por su majestuosidad y elegancia de un Palacio en el Cielo; su
    Lobby estará ubicado aproximadamente a 100 metros sobre el nivel de mar lo que dará una altura de 268 metros en su piso más Alto.
    Amplio lobby de doble altura, con acabados de mármol.
    Área social con vista panorámica a la ciudad de 360º, jacuzzi, sala de fiestas o reuniones, pool bar, piscina tipo infinito, piscina para niños, área de juegos, gimnasio full equipado, sauna, área de barbacoa.
    3 elevadores de alta velocidad.
    Pisos de cerámica 40×40 importados, finos acabados importados de la mejor calidad.
    8 niveles de estacionamientos
    Dos estacionamientos por apartamento para las unidades de 125m2 y 163m2.

    * La obra se inicia en el primer trimestre de 2010, y los apartamentos serán entregados a sus propietarios en diciembre 2011.

  • Happy MLK Day From the Center for Responsive Politics

    mlkjr.jpgIn observance today of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the Center for Responsive Politics is closed. 

    Therefore, the Capital Eye blog‘s morning Capital Eye Opener report will return Tuesday morning after a one-day hiatus.
    But check back later today for a new weekly PolitiQuizz — and the answer to last week’s question, as well. And if you’re not yet a fan of OpenSecrets.org on Facebook, become one here and join what’s become a lively conversation on a variety of money-in-politics issues.
  • Introducing Miss Moustache PLUS BONUS GIVEAWAY!

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    I’m very excited to show you these cute, cute, cute handmade cat collars and harnesses from Toronto-based Miss Moustache. All Miss Moustache products are inspired by two crazy cats, Bali and Shanghai. The collars are made with breakaway safety buckles and the harnesses are comfortable and lightweight. And check out the charms on the collars! So fashionable!

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    All Miss Moustache products are handmade in Toronto, plus 10% of sales are donated to the Toronto Humane Society.

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    BONUS GIVEAWAY! TWO WINNERS!

    Miss Moustache is feeling extra generous! She is offering two prize packages! Each winner will receive his or her choice of any collar design in the MM shop along with a tin of Miss Moustache organic catnip plus some other little MM surprises. To enter to win, please visit the Miss Moustache website and take a look around, then come back here and leave a comment on this post letting Miss Moustache know what you think of her products and please be sure to tell her if there is anything special you’d like to see in her shop in the future.

    One entry per person. The winners will be chosen in a random drawing on January 23. This giveaway is open to readers everywhere!


    10% Off Aspen Cat Collars, Harnesses & Leads

  • Brothers and Sisters S04E13 Run Baby Run HDTV XviD-FQM

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    Brothers and Sisters S04E13 Run Baby Run HDTV XviD-FQM

    XviD | MP3 VBR | 350MB

    EP 4.13 Run Baby Run

    Kitty’s friend Buffy (Cheryl Hines) comes between her and Robert in a political development; Kevin and Scotty take their first stab at surrogacy; Sarah finds common ground with a potential love interest.

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  • Chicago students step up immigration reform debate

    When she was a top student in her Chicago high school French class last year, Reyna Wences tried every excuse to avoid a planned field trip to Quebec. She secretly longed to join but knew she’d be arrested if she tried.

    “Is it the money?” she recalled her teacher at Walter Payton Prep  asking.

    Wences, fed up with the double life she’d been leading since her parents brought her into the country illegally nine years ago, finally said: “You know what? I’m undocumented.”

    In an event that might have been stymied by fear even a year ago, Wences and more than a dozen other undocumented students will risk making their status even more public Monday at a four-hour “coming out” summit in Pilsen coordinated by a new group hoping to push harder for reforms to the nation’s Immigration system.

    The Immigrant Youth Justice League, made up of about 15 Chicago-area students, is part of a wave of younger immigrant activists around the U.S. using more aggressive, in-your-face tactics to seek legal status as part of a volatile national debate that has stalled in Congress in recent years. They see an expected renewal of the debate this year as a last, best stand.

    The students whose activism was born during massive immigrant marches in Chicago and elsewhere years ago, have been behind several smaller recent battles, bouncing between Facebook campaigns and old-school organizing with equal ease.

    In Chicago, they helped drive rallies staged on behalf of Rigo Padilla, 21, a Mexican-born student at the University of Illinois at Chicago who won a one-year stay of deportation last month.  Outside an immigrant detention center in Miami, another group of students staged rallies that helped win a similar deferral for two Venezuelan brothers at Miami-Dade College.

    “(These youth) are maturing politically, they are becoming more sophisticated in their strategies and are also recognizing that something more drastic needs to be done to achieve their legal status,” said Nilda Flores-Gonzalez, a sociology professor at UIC who has been tracking youth activism in the Immigration movement.

    A spokeswoman in Chicago for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement indicated Sunday that, despite their public declarations, the students would not necessarily be a high-priority for arrest.

    “With limited resources, ICE prioritizes its enforcement actions based on implications to national security and public safety,” Gail Montenegro wrote in an e-mail.

    The Immigrant Youth Justice League was inspired by ongoing efforts to pass the so-called Dream Act, legislation that would grant conditional legal status to students who arrived as children. But the group, mostly Mexican-born, derives mainly from the Padilla campaign.

    “There was this feeling that, if we can win that, there’s so much more we could do as a group,” said Tania Unzueta, 26, who, along with Padilla, is a founding member of the group.

    Their success may depend on how comfortable the group’s growing membership is with risking deportation.

    Like Wences, many have kept their family histories secret. Brought into the U.S. as children, they know this country far better than their homelands and often speak English more naturally than any other language.

    “I was really afraid of coming home from school and not finding my mom or not finding my brother,” said Wences, 18.

    For Uriel Sanchez, 18, the frustrations of not having legal status surfaced a week before he was set to start as a freshman at DePaul University last fall.

    Though he had been promised financial aid for tuition, the money quickly evaporated when a school administrator asked him to provide a Social Security number, Sanchez said.

    “I knew that there would be absolutely no way to pay the thousands of dollars toward tuition,” Sanchez said.

    Sanchez now attends the more affordable Harold Washington College, where he studies political science. He expressed bitterness while reading a statement in English-accented Spanish at a news conference last week.

    “When we fail to speak up, when we fail to criticize … ” he said. “It is a far greater blow to the freedom, the decency and to the justice which truly represents this nation we call home.”

    Antonio Olivo

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • St. Charles student killed in Michigan plane crash

    The Aurora Beacon-News reports: Emma E. Biagioni, 20, of St. Charles, and David O. Otai, 23 — both students at Hope College in Holland, Mich. — were killed Sunday morning after taking off in a small plane in Allegan County, Mich., a school spokesman said.

    Otai, a licensed pilot, was a Kenyan international student.

    Emergency crews responded at 11:24 a.m. after dispatchers indicated that a small plane made a distress call, but airport radar indicated the plan had gone over the Saugatuck area in Allegan County and disappeared, according to a press release from the Allegan County sheriff’s office.

    Plane wreckage was spotted in a soybean field, but search efforts were hampered due to dense fog, which limited visibility to less than an eighth of a mile, the release said.

    The two were found trapped in the wreckage and were pronounced dead at the scene, the release said.

    The Allegan County Medical Examiner’s Office had not released the victims’ identification pending family notification as of 7 p.m. Sunday, spokeswoman Holly Lott said.

    However, Renner confirmed the identities of the two students and said Biagioni and Otai were well-known on campus and that Biagioni’s sister, Elizabeth, a freshman at Hope College, was being escorted home to St. Charles Sunday evening.

    Emma Biagioni was a member of the Class of 2007 at St. Charles East High School.

    Otai, a sophomore, was a licensed pilot who flew the small plane to gain flight hours, Renner said.

    Hope College, which is about 2½ hours northeast of Chicago, hosted a memorial service Sunday night that drew 1,100 people, Renner said. School had been in session for one week after winter break.

    Karen Patterson, chief editor of the student newspaper, The Anchor, said Emma Biagioni was a junior political science major and a national news editor.

    “Emma was kind, sweet, full of energy,” Patterson said.

    Get the full story: suburbanchicagonews.com.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Police respond to barricade situation on South Side

    A man has barricaded himself in his South Side residence Sunday night


  • Small firm eyes stimulus bonanza

    But it will be a tough sell to get Uncle Sam to fund such plans

    Greg Burns

    Leonard Maniscalco wants what just about every business owner could use: free money.

    Not a loan, mind you, but a grant, handout, giveaway — call it what you will.

    He wants $1.3 million, to be exact. In return, he is offering as many as 150 new jobs.

    As Maniscalco sees it, manufacturing jobs are worth a lot. They are, after all, a major focus of the federal stimulus package that will be kicking in big time during 2010.

    He has a plan to relaunch his fading manufacturing company into a promising related industry. And he sees no reason why Uncle Sam shouldn’t cut him a check, the sooner the better.

    “We read about this stimulus money, and it’s not helping small business at all,” he said. “This is what the stimulus should be all about.”

    As his general manager, Daniel Dwyer, asks, “Why can’t they invest in us?”

    If the idea sounds pie-in-the-sky, or maybe just batty, consider how the government expects to lose $30 billion on its investment in General Motors and Chrysler.

    By that score card, 150 jobs for $1.3 million would be a steal.

    Manufacturing jobs have been melting away. Illinois alone lost 52,000 last year. Nearly everybody agrees that producing goods in America makes it stronger, supporting a network of suppliers and distributors as well as a strategic industrial base.

    Maniscalco has a track record. His Bensenville-based company, Sackett Systems Inc., started making wheelbarrows and coal chutes at the turn of the century, eventually branching into heavy-duty steel racks for forklift batteries. He bought the company in 1982 and expanded from 10 employees to a peak of 150 a decade ago.

    In recent years, he has shrunk to 40 or so. He sold a major division and laid off the second shift at his plant on the outskirts of O’Hare International Airport. The rise of hydrogen fuel cells threatens to wipe out his remaining business.

    “What do we do?” Maniscalco asked. “Wait until the last minute, and then do something else?”

    During a trip through Newark, N.J., he noticed a parking tower made of steel that resembles a giant version of his company’s battery racks. A familiar sight in some densely populated European cities, these automated garages lift vehicles into their spots on a space-conserving metal framework.

    Maniscalco struck a deal with a U.S. company that makes them in China. For $1.3 million, he could refit his mostly vacant metal-fabricating factory and within six months pump out his first car park. “We know we can do it,” he said.

    If the economy were stronger, he would put up enough collateral to obtain a loan. If the opportunity were bigger, he would seek venture partners. For this risky, modest project, however, he couldn’t help noticing the nearly $800 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

    Although that program passed in 2009, most of its government contracts for highway infrastructure, energy efficiency and other big projects will pay out in 2010, and Congress is mulling a second stimulus measure on top of that.

    While last year’s spending especially supported state and local governments, this year the “vast majority” of job creation will occur in the private sector, according to Michael Balsam, chief solutions officer at Onvia, a Seattle-based firm that tracks government spending.

    The money will flow to contractors providing everything from road construction to smart-grid software. If Maniscalco’s plan involved innovation or environmental benefits, it might conceivably fit into the program, Balsam said. Short of that, however, it’s very much a long shot.

    “Just saying, ‘We’re going to create jobs,’ won’t be enough,” he said.

    Even with the administration’s recent emphasis on Main Street over Wall Street, Uncle Sam won’t be doling out money to every company with an idea, noted John Fernandez, assistant secretary of commerce for economic development.

    “Our country’s still based on free enterprise,” said Fernandez, who attended a railroad transit conference in Chicago last week. “It’s not the federal bank of the U.S. becoming the loan officer.”

    Maniscalco, meanwhile, is keeping the faith. Walking through a vacant factory site on his grounds, complete with empty offices and break room, he said he wasn’t interested in putting it on the market. “I don’t want to sell it because I think we’re going to need it.”

    [email protected]

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • First Israeli minister to visit Abu Dhabi – Tehran Times

    National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau will attend a conference of the International Renewable Energy Agency opening Sunday. Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said Saturday this was a first visit by an Israeli Cabinet minister to Abu Dhabi …


  • Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars Hits the App Store [IPhone Apps]

    The iPhone’s got its first GTA title, and it looks pretty great. As teased before, this is a top-down GTA, and it’s a near-direct port of the Nintendo DS version, albeit with better graphics, and more awkward controls.

    Touch Arcade‘s had some time to run/jack/drive/murder their way around the game a little bit, and here’s what they noticed:

    • The graphics are much better than they looked in the early screenshots, falling closer to the PSP version of the game than the DS version.

    • The plot and writing are classic GTA, which is to say decent, and gratuitously profane. In a good way!

    • The controls aren’t as awkward as they look. (Note: they look very awkward.)

    • It’s a full-fledged GTA title, with integrated minigames, hours of gameplay and an appropriately high price: $10.

    GTA: Chinatown Wars is live in the App Store. [Touch Arcade]







  • Good News, Bad News on China’s High Savings

    The latest research from the International Monetary Fund offers some encouraging news on China’s push to lower its extraordinarily high national savings rate and move toward a more consumption-driven economy.

    The new paper (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.cfm?sk=23533.0) by IMF staffers Steven Barnett and Ray Brooks – formerly of the fund’s office in Beijing – offers statistical evidence that the increased government spending on healthcare in recent years does actually encourage Chinese households to consume more. “Higher government health spending seems to reduce the need for precautionary saving and frees up households’ ability to spend on other goods and services,” they write.

    The government now is taking a variety of measures (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126282687863718925.html) to try to boost consumer spending, not all of them welcomed by outside economists. The IMF paper supports a view long expressed by the fund and other international agencies: that rebuilding a social safety net is one of the best ways to encourage a higher level of Chinese consumer spending over the long term. The authors say the healthcare overhaul announced in early 2009 should help boost consumption as well as improve health.

    Read more on the Real time China Report blog.