Category: News

  • Late night with the American pundit

    “Say something more,” the burly taxi driver demanded after I told him the name of the Dublin hotel where I planned to stay.

    “Don’t you know where it is?” I inquired, wondering what he meant.

    “You’re that Yank on the radio,” he responded. Then I knew.

    Americans from the Midwestern heartland never think they have any distinguishing characteristic, linguistically speaking, let alone a defining accent. But several conversations about politics across the Atlantic for Morning Ireland prompted the voice recognition en route from the airport. And, as we made our way to the hotel, the driver provided his broach-no-opposition opinions on all matters political.

    On that trip I discovered that semi-regular duty for the most popular radio news program in a small country means that you keep running into people eager to pose their questions and posit their views, mostly the latter.

    This little-league case of vocal-cord celebrity began serendipitously in 2004 as a result of a Hesburgh Lecture for Notre Dame at Saint Patrick’s College in Dublin. Before the trip, a producer phoned about the talk (a disquisition on that year’s presidential campaign), and he and his colleagues got into the habit of calling to discuss American political events of potential interest to an Irish audience.

    Enlightening as the encounter with a cabbie can be — one other listener upon meeting me unforgettably remarked, “You sound taller than you are” — the on-air segments for the program share certain similarities. With the five-hour time difference, we’re usually conducting these journalistic colloquies at around 3 a.m. in South Bend.

    Wake-up call

    Though this hour might be prime time for a night owl, it’s light-years different for an early bird with an internal clock perpetually set to 5 a.m. To be safe, a producer in Dublin calls a half-hour before every interview to make sure I’m awake, if not alert.

    Radio, I here confess, is the only permissible medium for these productions. Broadcast central is the kitchen table, where (swaddled in robe and nightshirt) I struggle to string one semi-coherent word after another, while holding a telephone to one ear and glancing at my notebook to spot a phrase or point worth raising.

    On occasion, the odd hour can lead to moments of regret, sentences that defy diagramming or the intrusion of emotion. During late spring of 2008, in the pre-dawn morn after a full day of punditry, I got into a brief on-air kerfuffle about the purity of my political analysis. When I asserted my nonpartisan independence with gusto, saying I try mightily to be as fair as possible, one sensitive listener found the defense of my virtue worthy of comment.

    “As an American living in Ireland,” the email began, “I am quite in tune with the rules of conversation here, which are quite different from those in the U.S. People do not cut off the interviewer in the brusque, inappropriate manner in which you did at the beginning of the interview.

    “I was appalled at your initial reaction and comment, which would have been perceived as extremely rude and typically-American-in-a-bad-way here. Given the already strong anti-American feeling, your initial reaction surely added to the conviction here that Americans in general are rude and not at all gracious.”
    Criticism, even at the upper decibel range, serves a purpose, and cools the creator’s temper. But, to be fair, responses aren’t always so thorny. Some are rosier and include thanks for my abandoning sleep to explain the intricacies of America’s democratic dance.

    You still never really know what to expect when you hang up the phone. One day in the high season of the 2008 campaign, I got to my campus office later that morning to find a phone message from another Dublin-based radio outlet.

    That day a channel-switching listener could have received an oral postcard from America both driving to work and driving back home sent from the same person — and probably wondered whether that disembodied speaker was the sole soul keeping up with politics across the Atlantic.

    View from afar

    Another time, a few hours after a report, a television producer with a charming brogue rang to ask if I might be the person who chattered away on Morning Ireland earlier. After providing positive identification, I heard these words: “Could you come to Washington this afternoon for an interview?”

    At that moment (and 600 miles away), I concluded that American geography might not be a required subject in the Irish educational system. Yet as I slouch towards anecdotage, I’ve come to realize what my odd-hour radio days mean. Always unscripted, these extemporaneous exchanges have forced me to reconsider how others view America, our hopelessly complex campaign system and the utter unpredictability of politics.

    Although my light-slumbering, long-suffering wife is certain to file a dissenting opinion, you might even say this trans-Atlantic talking is worth losing sleep over.


    Bob Schmuhl is Walter H. Annenberg-Edmund P. Joyce Professor of American Studies and Journalism at Notre Dame and director of the John W. Gallivan Program in Journalism, Ethics & Democracy.


  • Skype Class Action Settlement Offers $4 For Expired Credits [Skype]

    If you purchased Skype credit that expired prior to December 31st 2009 after 180 days of activity, you could be entitled to a $4 credit.

    Basically, the plaintiffs in the case argue that the Skype policy of expiring credits after 180 days of inactivity violates various state law—including “gift certificate” consumer protection. Skype is all like “nahhh” and the plantiffs are all like “uh-huh!” But the bottom line is this—the parties have agreed on a settlement that would eliminate the 180 day policy and offer a $4 voucher to customers who had credits expire before the end of last year. Check out the statement below to review your options.

    NOTICE OF PROPOSED SETTLEMENT OF CLASS ACTION

    If you are a United States resident who purchased Skype Credit that, on at least one occasion prior to December 31, 2009, expired after 180 days of inactivity, a proposed class action settlement may affect your rights. PLEASE READ THIS NOTICE CAREFULLY.

    * Plaintiffs Holly Barker and Brian Carness have filed lawsuits against defendants Skype Communications, S.a.r.l. (“Skype Communications”), Skype Technologies S.A., Skype, Inc. and eBay Inc., on its own behalf and as successor by merger to Skype Delaware Holdings, Inc. (collectively, the “Defendants”) challenging the Skype Credit expiration policy. Plaintiffs allege that Skype User Accounts and Skype Credit constitute “gift certificates” that cannot expire or be subject to inactivity fees under various states’ laws and that Defendants unlawfully applied the Skype Credit expiration policy against their Skype Credit balances after 180 days of inactivity in supposed violation of these various states’ laws, including applicable “gift certificate,” consumer protection and/or unfair and deceptive practices laws.

    * Defendants deny that they did anything wrong whatsoever, and contend that plaintiffs’ claims are meritless. No court has decided which side is right, and both sides have agreed to resolve the cases and provide relief to the Settlement Class instead of litigation. There is a proposed settlement on behalf of a nationwide class of current and former United States resident purchasers of Skype Credit from Skype Communications, which, if approved, will provide that Skype Communications shall discontinue its Skype Credit expiration policy and implement a Reactivation Policy whereby Skype Credit will no longer expire after 180 days of inactivity, but rather be deemed “inactive” and subject to reactivation. In addition, Skype Communications, on behalf of itself and the other Defendants, has agreed to pay a Settlement Amount of $1,850,000 in full and complete settlement of the Released Claims, which shall include: (i) attorneys’ fees and costs and named plaintiffs’ incentive awards not to exceed $1,000 each, which collectively shall not exceed 25% of the Settlement Amount subject to Court approval; and (ii) availability, on a claims made basis, of an electronic voucher for $4.00 of Skype Credit per claimant from the Net Settlement Amount.

    * If you are a member of the Settlement Class, your legal rights are affected and you have a choice to make right now: [CLICK TO ENLARGE]

    [creditexpirationclassaction Image via Philip Bantz]







  • Google Docs to allow storage of any type of file

    Google is opening up its Docs hosted office productivity suite so that users can store any type of file in it, giving the popular software-as-a-service product an important online storage component.

    The functionality will be rolled out over the coming weeks to all Docs users, both the ones who use the stand-alone suite as well as those who use it as part of the broader communication and collaboration Apps suite for organizations.

    Now, Docs users will be able to store all their important files in a single place online, where they can access them from anywhere and share them with other people, according to Google.

    via Google Docs to allow storage of any type of file | Storage & Backup | Macworld.

  • Michael Schumacher comienza los test con un GP2

    Michael Schumacher ya ha iniciado los test con un monoplaza de GP2 y que tendrá una duración total de tres días. Recordemos que debido a la nueva normativa, Schumacher no podrá probar más de 8 días el nuevo monplaza de Mercedes Grand Prix antes de que de comenzo el GP de Bahrain.

    Michael Schumacher en los test con un GP2

    Bruno Michel, organizador de la GP2 Series ha dejado unas palabras sobre el piloto alemán, “Es un honor y un privilegio para nosotros que Michael Schumacher nos ayude a desarrollar nuestro coche. EL objetivo de las GP2 Series es preparar a jóvenes pilotos para la Fórmula 1. Este test será muy importante para el futuro de nuestros pilotos y será una confirmación de la gran competitividad del campeonato. Estoy convencido que su conocimiento e inigualable habilidad de conducción nos ayudarán a desarrollar un gran coche para la próxima temporada”.

    Tal y como se puede ver, el Bruno Michel se deshace en elogios para Michael, y seguramente el alemán haría lo mismo con quien le ha permitido tener unos días de pruebas, aunque no sea con un Fórmula 1.

    Related posts:

    1. Michael Schumacher comenzará mañana los test de pretemporada
    2. Michael Schumacher ya habría cerrado un acuerdo con Mercedes Grand Prix
    3. Michael Schumacher no asesorará a Fernando Alonso
  • Dan Neil on GMC Terrain: “No bark, no bite, but plenty of fleas”

    Filed under: , , , ,


    2010 GMC Terrain – click for high-res gallery

    Sometimes, we come across head-scratchers. What’s the meaning of life? Nancy Kerrigan’s anguished “Why?” Or most recently, “what is the point of the 2010 GMC Terrain?” The answer to the latter seems easy – it’s to sell, silly. It appears to be having some effect; GMC finished December 2009 four percent ahead of its 2008 numbers. We’ve driven the Terrain and find it virtually identical to its sister car, the Chevrolet Equinox. The biggest difference is that we find the GMC to be significantly harder to look at. The Los Angeles Times‘ auto pundit extraordinaire Dan Neil has gotten some seat time in a V6 Terrain and notes its stylistic hardships: “the Terrain looks like it has a a window air-conditioning unit attached to the nose.” Amen.

    Other incongruities and letdowns crop up in Neil’s assessment, not the least of which is the entire vehicle’s raison d’être in GMC showrooms in the first place. After all, Neil notes, the Terrain is a relatively blatant example of GM’s historical practice of badge-engineering. Neil goes on to wonder aloud as to why General Motors bothers with a GMC version at all – especially when the money could have been better spent raising the vehicle up to excellent from a point that he contends is solidly mediocre. The majority of the automotive press has come away rather more impressed with the Terrain/Equinox package (heck, the Chevy was a finalist for the just-announced North American Truck of the Year award), and despite our misgivings about the GMC’s looks, we’ve found the platform to be quite competitive with its classmates.

    Still, the badge-engineering issue with this vehicle is one we’ve discussed in-depth on our podcast, and it remains a nettlesome topic. But then again, no consumers appear to be concerned about it those issues, as both the Terrain and the Equinox are selling at a handsome clip.

    Gallery: 2010 GMC Terrain

    [Source: The Los Angeles Times]

    Dan Neil on GMC Terrain: “No bark, no bite, but plenty of fleas” originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 11:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Miss kabylie 2010 is from Sidi-Aich

    (Mercredi 13 Janvier 2010)

    Allouche Lidya, étudiante en droit à BéjaÏa
    Miss Kabylie 2010 est de Sidi-Aïch
    Par : Mohamed Haouchine


    Elle s’appelle Allouche Lidya. C’est une jolie fille de Sidi-Aïch qui a été élue hier à Tizi Ouzou “Miss Kabylie 2010”. Âgée de 22 ans, la nouvelle Miss Kabylie est étudiante en droit à l’université de Béjaïa. “C’est le plus beau jour de ma vie ! Je suis heureuse de représenter la Kabylie au prochain concours national de Miss Algérie 2010 et je dis joyeux Yennayer à tout le peuple algérien”, nous a déclaré la ravissante Lidya, qui a tenu à féliciter aussi toutes les concurrentes de cette 5e édition que le jury a eu bien du mal à départager tant la sélection a été serrée.

    Source: http://liberte-algerie.com/edit.php?id=128560

  • normal insulin sensitivity?

    I’m on the medtronic pump using the bolus wizard. lately i’ve been low some mornings and i’ve noticed that it’s only when i’ve had a correction bolus before bed the previous night. i know when i was last at my endo she said my insulin sensitivity was set more aggressively than normal, but I’m just curious using whatever equations and things get used, what my assumed sensitivity setting would be… I’m 135 pounds and average about 34 units of humalog daily (i believe the estimate I was given before was based entirely on weight but can’t remember for sure).
  • 5 Maiores cidades da Região Nordeste-Central de SP

    Esse Thread divulga as 5 maiores cidades da região Nordeste-Central de SP, também conhecida como Macrorregião de Ribeirão Preto..

    Região Nordeste – Ribeirão Preto
    Região Central – São Carlos

    População das 5 cidades juntas: 1.434.996 habitantes

    _________________________________________________________________

    1º – RIBEIRÃO PRETO

    População: 563.107 habitantes
    PIB: R$ 12 969 387 – Segundo Maior da Região
    PIB Per Capita: R$ 23 692,00
    Apelido: Capital do Chope
    Fundação: 19 de junho de 1856

    Curiosidades

    *Capital Brasileira do Agronegócio
    *Quarta Maior cidade do Interior de São Paulo
    *O Novo Shopping é o maior Shopping do Interior de SP
    *Primeira cidade do Brasil a colocar o nome Etanol nos postos de Combustíveis


    Foto: Área de RP, com detalhe para Agrishow
    Autor: Tiago Morgan

    _________________________________________________________________

    2º – FRANCA

    População: 330.938 habitantes
    PIB: R$ 3.018.126 – Quarto Maior da Região
    PIB Per Capita: R$ 9.374,00
    Apelido: Cidade das Três Colinas
    Fundação: 3 de Dezembro de 1805 – Mais Antiga

    Curiosidades

    *Tem 334 km² de área urbana contra 274km² de Ribeirão Preto
    *É a 9ª maior cidade do Interior de SP
    *Por mais que a cidade tenha 330 mil habitantes é muito pouco densa
    *A Atriz Regina Duarte nasceu em Franca


    Foto: Áerea de Franca (Não ficou muito boa/Foi difícil achar uma boa de Franca)
    Autor: Prefeitura Municipal de Franca

    _________________________________________________________________

    3º – SÃO CARLOS

    População: 220.463 habitantes
    PIB: R$ 3.501.247 – Terceiro Maior da Região
    PIB Per Capita: R$ 16.441,00
    Apelido: Sanca
    Fundação: 4 de novembro de 1857

    Curiosidades

    *Principal Pólo Tecnológico do Interior Paulista
    *A Subdivisão da Multinacional Faber-Castell em SC é a maior do mundo
    *UFSCar é a única Universidade Federal do Interior de São Paulo
    *Ronald Golias pioneiro da televisão brasileira nasceu em São Carlos


    Foto: Festa de 150 anos de São Carlos em frente a Catedral
    Autor: Almir Sales

    _________________________________________________________________

    4º – ARARAQUARA

    População: 200.666
    PIB: R$ 2.758.459 – Quinto Maior da Região
    PIB Per Capita: R$ 14.000,00
    Fundação: 22 de Agosto de 1817

    Curiosidades

    *Melhor cidade da região
    *4ª cidade melhor do País
    *A Record News tem sua sede em Araraquara
    *É Conurbada com Américo Brasiliense


    Foto: Panorâmica de Araraquara
    Autor: Prefeitura Municipal de Araraquara

    _________________________________________________________________

    5º – SERTÃOZINHO

    População: 119.822
    PIB: R$ 24 575 265 – Maior da Região
    PIB Per Capita: R$ 27.591,145
    Apelido: Little Texas
    Fundação: 5 de Dezembro 1896

    Curiosidades

    *Maior Ecônomia da Região
    *Capital do Etanol
    *Uma das cidades mais influentes no cenário nacional
    *7ª Melhor cidade do Brasil


    Foto: Áerea de Sertãozinho
    Autor: Wikipédia

    _________________________________________________________________

    Essas cinco cidades representam a região de todas as formas possíveis, sejam elas turísticas, ecônomicas, etc.

    (Dados de População, PIB, PIB Per Capita e Apelido retirados de: www.pt.wikipedia.org)

    _________________________________________________________________

    PS.: FAÇAM SEUS COMENTÁRIOS>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

    Até o Próximo Thread!!!!!

    🙂

  • 30-Minute EV Fast Charging Stations Coming In 3Q Of 2010

    Right now, refilling your electric vehicle is quite a timely process. Even the best EV charging systems can take several hours to fully charge a depleted battery, and while this might be fine and dandy for commuter cars, it makes living with an electric car as a daily driver a bit more difficult.

    But fast charging stations are coming, and could be a real game changer. Coulomb Technologies and Aker Wade are teaming up their technologies to bring a “Level III” charging stations to the world later this year. These stations could charge an electric car in as little as 15 minutes. Now that’s impressive.

    Read more of this story »


  • Scientists confirm link between BPA and heart disease in humans

    by Tom Laskawy

    The FDA’s new report on the safety of endocrine-disrupting chemical bisphenol A is months overdue and there is still no sign of when or if the agency will release the report. Perhaps they are waiting for that piece of “smoking gun” evidence that BPA represents a clear and present danger to human health? Well, thanks to researchers from Peninsula College of Medicine in Britain, we just may have it.

    In 2008, the group looked at data from the 2003-2004 US National Health and Nutrition
    Examination Survey (NHANES) which included urinary BPA levels for the first time. The results:

    [A] quarter of the population with the highest levels of BPA were more than
    twice as likely to report having heart disease or diabetes, compared to
    the quarter with the lowest BPA levels. They also found that higher BPA
    levels were associated with clinically abnormal liver enzyme
    concentrations.

    At the time, even the researchers admitted the possibility that it was a statistical fluke. But the same team has now analyzed the 2005-2006 NHANES, which used an entirely different group of people, and guess what? The association between BPA exposure and heart disease in humans is as strong as ever (via Toronto’s Globe and Mail):

    According to the new research, 60-year-old American males with the
    highest amounts of bisphenol A in their urine had about a 45 per cent
    greater risk of cardiovascular disease than men the same age with lower
    exposures, confirming the results of a previous study on the topic
    released in 2008 and based on a different sample of people.

    This comes despite the fact that median BPA levels dropped by 30 percent between 2004 and 2006 to around 2 parts per billion. Even with the lower exposure, however, odds of heart disease were still significantly higher. Note that the researchers performed rigorous calculations to ensure that they isolated the effect of bisphenol A and weren’t getting correlations with other factors (you can dig into the statistics here).

    It’s true that the earlier relationship between BPA and diabetes and BPA and liver function were less present in the new data. But Dr. David Melzer, the lead author on the study, believes this is a result of the lower human BPA levels measured. As he put it to me:

    The 2005/6 data for the liver enzymes and diabetes are also
    statistically consistent with the 2003/4, although not significant on their
    own, probably because of the fall in BPA levels. Note that the new data do not statistically
    contradict the 2003/4 data on diabetes or liver enzymes: overall they add to it
    although the sample size is too small at these lower BPA levels to get a
    definitive result for 2005/6 on its own.

    Overall this clearly takes the hypothesis of a BPA—adult
    heart disease association through to the level of evidence.
    Given the obvious concern that BPA might be directly driving these health
    effects, we now need to urgently clarify the mechanisms behind these
    associations.

    Indeed, Dr. Melzer believes his study is underestimating the effect of BPA due to the relatively small sample size—he believes further study will revise the effect of BPA on heart disease upward.

    The Globe and Mail article offered this response from a spokesman for industry lobbying group the American Chemistry Council:

    “The study itself does not establish a cause-and-effect relationship
    between BPA exposure and heart disease,” commented Steven Hentges, a
    spokesman for the group.

    But what he doesn’t say is that the only way to “prove” that cause-and-effect, in other words to isolate BPA’s role beyond doubt, would involve conducting a controlled clinical trial, i.e. exposing humans to BPA and seeing who dies. That, of course, isn’t science, it’s homicide, which is why toxic chemical research is mostly performed on rats. And the evidence from rats on BPA, despite industry attempts at obfuscation, is already overwhelming.

    These kind of population studies—analysis in effect of the natural experiment industry is performing on us—represents the best evidence we could reasonably hope to get. These results go far beyond what’s required by any meaningful precautionary principle. This is now about saving lives. Yes, as the scientists observe, more research is needed to understand the precise physiology through which BPA causes heart disease and to determine the risk factor with greater accuracy. But whether that increased risk end up at 30 percent or 60 percent or somewhere inbetween, the FDA now knows all it needs to know to conclude that even low exposure to BPA represents a serious risk to human health.

    Related Links:

    FDA on BPA: Our hands are tied

    Food giants pile on salt to tart up flavorless dreck

    [UPDATED:] FDA’s food safety blogger doesn’t think meat safety is a problem






  • Could Ovi Support Lead to a Subsidized N900 in the U.S.?

    Nokia  yesterday extended support for its Ovi Store to its N900 via a firmware update, enabling users of the Maemo-based gadget to browse the shelves and download applications. It’s a move that may finally help the manufacturer score the carrier deal it needs to gain traction with its flagship device in the U.S.

    The N900, which is Nokia’s first device to run the Linux-based Maemo 5 operating system, debuted late last year to positive reviews (which Om took as a sign that the Finns were beginning to get things right). Nokia has staked its future to Maemo — at least on high-end devices — in an effort to better compete with Apple’s iPhone, RIM’s BlackBerry and the Android OS. But while the N900 is supported by T-Mobile USA’s 3G network, the carrier doesn’t subsidize the gadget, leaving it with a price tag of $550-$700 — far out of the range of most consumers.

    As Kevin noted over at jkOnTheRun, the store is a substantial improvement over the handset’s embedded Application Manager, which requires users to add software repositories in order to download new apps — a time-consuming process that many mainstream users don’t know how to do. While the selection of Maemo apps in the Ovi Store is still pretty thin, that is sure to change as Nokia expands its portfolio of Maemo-based devices later this year and beyond.

    Nokia’s carrier relationships have never been its strong suit, but support for the Ovi Store may just be enough to entice T-Mobile to pony up some cash to defray the cost of the N900 and give it more mass-market appeal. And that would go a long way toward helping Nokia get back in the game in the U.S.

    In-post image courtesy Flickr user SpeednutDave.

  • methods to find ideas

    Welcome everyone!!:nuts: I want to know methods to find ideas and develop the idea of architecture students.And to compare methods between universities
    People help me ,please.!!! Thank you very much!!!
  • Conde’s $10,000 Reward for Good Ideas is a Good Idea!

    Conde Nast, the titanic and tottering publishing giant, is offering $10,000 every quarter to the employee with the best idea about improving the company. This idea is getting snarked all over the place (John Kolbin’s Observer piece is pretty funny) but I can’t seem to muster much cynicism about this idea. In fact … I think it’s a great idea.

    Congratulations, Si Newhouse! Somebody give this guy $10,000!

    Last year, you might remember the company paid McKinsey consultants
    millions of dollars to skulk the hallways of 4 Times Square and perform
    a pre-mortem of its finances. The whole media world could smell the
    rot. But Conde needed McKinsey to diagnose the gangrene publicly and recommend exactly what Conde would have done anyway: Announce a 25% cut across the company.

    Tapping your in-house resources to actually get new ideas seems like a better use of company money. Ten thousand dollars means very little to Conde Nast as a company and very much indeed to a Conde Nast employee not used to receiving a 20% salary bonus in exchange for a memo. A sweet incentive unleashed upon a smart media company is a potent combo.

    My biggest concern isn’t that this move seems desperate (really, who cares at this point?). My biggest concern is that there’s no guarantee that Conde will reward the right ideas. Indeed the simplest ideas — including: Charge for more online content; Change the New Yorker and Vanity Fair websites to promote their amazing blogs; Keep mag covers glossy but change to thinner paper in the books you send out to subscribers to cut down on production costs — are probably better than the revolutionary-seeming ideas that might catch Si’s eye.




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  • Nevada Man Pleads Guilty to Giving Kickbacks to Michigan Union Boss

    Joseph Roxlyn Jewett Pleads Guilty to Giving Kickbacks to Carpenters’ Union Boss

    Joseph Roxlyn Jewett, of Las Vegas, Nevada, pleaded guilty to giving a kickback to the former leader of the Michigan Regional Council of Carpenters (“MRCC”), United States Attorney Barbara L. McQuade announced today.

    The former union boss had engineered the use of Jewett’s company as a consultant on a deal involving the construction of a casino that was funded by the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund.

    During a hearing before United States District Judge Arthur J. Tarnow, Jewett admitted that in May 2006, Jewett promised to give Walter Ralph Mabry a one-third interest in an $800,000 investment.

    Mabry was the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund and Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the MRCC.

    Jewett promised Mabry the one-third share of the $800,000 investment because Mabry had asked the investment manager of the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund to use Jewett’s company, J&R Ventures, as a consultant on a pension fund investment in a casino in Biloxi, Mississippi that had been wiped out by Hurricane Katrina.

    Based on his guilty plea and conviction for giving a kickback to a fiduciary of a labor union pension fund, Jewett is facing a maximum of three years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000.

    Based on calculations under the United States Sentencing Guidelines included in the Plea Agreement, Jewett is facing a sentencing guideline range of between 18 and 24 months in prison.

    Jewett also has agreed to forfeit $157,000 in funds derived from the kickback scheme.

    McQuade was joined in the announcement by FBI Special Agent in Charge Andrew Arena, James Vandenberg, the Special Agent in Charge of the Department of Labor, Office of Investigations–Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations, and Regional Director Paul C. Baumann of the Employee Benefits Security Administration.

    Andrew Arena, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation said, “Embezzling union resources and accepting kickbacks systematically robs union monetary assets and decreases benefits to all members. The FBI will continue to aggressively investigate these cases with our law enforcement partners.”

    James Vanderberg, Special Agent-in-Charge for the Chicago Regional Office of the United States Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General said, “Pension related kickback schemes by consultants to union affiliated benefit plans compromise the retirement accounts of union members. This office will work aggressively with our law enforcement partners to investigate crimes that undermine the financial well being of these pension funds.”

    The case was investigated by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General–Office of Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations, and the Employee Benefits Security Administration. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney David A. Gardey and Assistant United States Attorney Phillip Ross.


  • anyone have a GOOD recipe for cauliflower cakes?

    i could wing it…

    but i’m wondering if anyone has a recipe they love.

    i’m cooking salmon tonight, and pre-D would make potato cakes with salmon. i was hoping to make something similar with cauliflower (but my potato recipe calls for flour, bisquick…all the bad things in life;) )

    i like bacon and onions in mine, and then to brown the cakes in the bacon fat and bake them in the oven.

    *drool*

  • Project Runway Ditches Sketchpads for HP TouchSmart PCs

    screenshot 031 300x200 Project Runway Ditches Sketchpads for HP TouchSmart PCsTomorrow Project Runway returns to the city that started it all – New York. They are also merging fashion and technology with the introduction of HP TouchSmart PCs and HP TouchSmart tm2 notebooks to help bring their creations to life. Contestants will, for the first time in the history of the series, have the option to use computers to sketch designs and inspire their work. Throughout Project Runway’s seventh season, expect to see designers alternate between traditional sketchpads and pens for HP PCs  that give them greater freedom to experiment with design mock-ups for each challenge. HP is no stranger to the fashion world since they were instrumental in involving Vivienne Tam and her Digital Clutch netbook. Can’t wait to see if these design gurus even know how to operate a computer not just a sewing machine. screenshot 022 300x199 Project Runway Ditches Sketchpads for HP TouchSmart PCsscreenshot 01 300x201 Project Runway Ditches Sketchpads for HP TouchSmart PCs


     Project Runway Ditches Sketchpads for HP TouchSmart PCs


  • Milano | 62 pavimentos | 202 metros

    O Edifício:

    * São 62 pavimentos, sendo 58 tipo, térreo e 3 subsolos;
    * 4 elevadores semi-panorâmicos de alta velocidade;
    * 1 apartamento por andar;
    * Cobertura Triplex com solarium;
    * Fachada de Mármore e Pele de vidro;
    * Grande área de Resort com toboáguas e hidromassagem;

    Raia de 50 m, toboágua com 40 metros de altura e quadra de tênis

    A maior piscina suspensa no maior edifício do Brasil

    Em breve, mais um lançamento

  • Going to Macworld Expo 2010? Join our community for updates and news

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    For the past several years, IDG World Expo has created a community on Ning for Macworld Expo. You can join up and follow various bloggers and companies, and now TUAW has a group page for the show.

    To join the group, just head over to http://macworldexpo.ning.com/group/tuaw. You can participate in our Macworld Expo discussion, find out where TUAW bloggers will be at the show, and even find out about possible meetups in San Francisco during Macworld.

    It’s all free, and we’d love to have you join in on the fun. If you already have a login for the Macworld 2010 site, simply ask to be added to the group. For those who don’t have a login, you can sign up by clicking the appropriate Sign Up link on the right side of the page.

    TUAWGoing to Macworld Expo 2010? Join our community for updates and news originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • English Heritage!

    :ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno::ohno:

    I am currently doing a pretty big assignment on British colonial cities and ive been doing some research into British/Indian cities, singapore, shanghai, hong kong, melbourne and cape town and comparing them to the major control hub: London

    One of the key points is how colonial cities have shaped London and how London has shaped colonial cities and the effects of this creation ‘colonial spaces’.

    One thing that ive noticed and has seriously pi*sed me off… is that many of these colonial cities do a better job of maintaining their spaces of British Heritage than London does.

    Not only do they hamper the development of skyscrapers in one the the world’s major financial hubs and most populous cities.

    …They dont do anything to protect some of London’s most significant historical buildings!

    I hate English Heritage

    Rant Over

  • Gmail Goes Secure

    gmail_logo.PNGGoogle has announced that Gmail will now operate using HTTPS, a secure connection between a browser and a server, by default. Previously, users could turn on HTTPS connections as default in their settings, but the situation has now been reversed.

    Google said that after taking a look at the trade-off between speed and security, the primary concern in this case, they decided that it was worth it to the end-user to automatically use a secure connection.

    Sponsor

    A group of 37 security and privacy specialists sent Google a letter (.pdf) last June, urging the company to offer this feature. Gmail became the third largest email provider last August, with more than 37 million unique visitors.

    For all of you sitting at a coffee shop all day, using its unsecured wireless network, Google may have just saved you some serious headaches. That extra couple of seconds of load-time may just be worth it. Of course, if you don’t use Gmail or your service doesn’t offer HTTPS, there are always solutions like Pretty Good Privacy to keep your private emails secure.

    Discuss


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