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  • R.I.P. Professor Gabriel Wilner

    by Julian Ku

    <br />

    Professor Gabriel Wilner

    Sad news from the University of Georgia:

    Gabriel Michael Wilner, a University law professor and executive director of International, Comparative and Graduate Legal Studies, died unexpectedly at his home Friday.

    A native of Beirut, Lebanon, Wilner has been with UGA since 1973 and has served in several capacities since coming to the University. He has taught private international, comparative and maritime law, served as director of the law school’s Master of Laws program, and directed the Brussels Seminar on the Law and Institutions of the European Union since its inception in 1973….

    A memorial service for Wilner will be held at the Bernstein Funeral Home in Athens on Friday at 11 a.m. In lieu of flowers, his family suggests a donation to the National Kidney Foundation, 30 East 33rd St., New York, NY 10016.

  • Yoffie on Iran: Time to Get Serious

    In a strong essay in the Forward
    this week, Union for Reform Judaism President
    Rabbi Eric Yoffie
    says that “the time has come for the centrist and liberal elements of the
    American Jewish community to get serious about mobilizing support against a
    nuclear Iran.”




    He argues that:

    Their failure to do so until now
    is somewhat of a puzzle. It may be that they have simply not recognized the
    absolute urgency of the situation. It may also be that they are not championing
    this issue because others see it as a parochial one, and American Jews do not
    like to be perceived as self-serving. Yet it would be a terrible mistake to
    fall into this trap.


  • Seat no dará el salto al mercado asiático

    Unos meses atrás, se rumoreaba sobre una posible expansión de la marca Seat al mercado asiático, en concreto, el mercado chino. Finalmente no será posible debido a órdenes estratégicas de la alta dirección del Grupo Volkswagen.

    Seat intentó firmar un acuerdo con la FAW (First Automobile Works) que le permitiera fabricar sus modelos en Guangzhou. Según afirma el medio chino China Car Times, esta decisión ha sido tomada con la intención de asentar a Skoda como marca occidental preferente de China.

    Related posts:

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    2. Seat regalará un curso de conducción profesional a los clientes que compren sus modelos más deportivos
    3. Seat deja de fabricar el Toledo
  • iPhone 3GS Now $97 At Walmart … 4G Coming Soon?

    Walmart has dropped the price of the iPhone 3GS to $97, which is $2 less than Apple charges for the older 3G model. The move has fueled speculation that Apple plans to announce the next-generation iPhone at its developers conference next month. They may as well. It’s not like anybody’s going to be surprised to see it.

    Speculation about the new iPhone is running wild, given Apple’s problems keeping prototypes locked up (and the media’s need for new Apple news at least once a week). Muses The Wall Street Journal:

    [T]he announcement comes as speculation is heating up about when Apple will launch a new iPhone.

    In past years, Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs has unveiled new iPhones at the company’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference, offering them up for sale soon after in late June or early July. The company said on Monday that Jobs would be delivering his keynote at this year’s WWDC on June 7 at 10 a.m.

    Wal-Mart’s price cut is particularly notable because when Apple introduced the iPhone 3GS last year, it cut the price of the older iPhone to $99. Wal-Mart’s new price would allow it to continue to lead in pricing if Apple decides to repeat last year’s strategy and reduce the price of its iPhone 3GS to $99 when the next iPhone comes out.

    Of course, the news could be nothing more than Walmart being Walmart, which is the way the big boxer is playing it right now. The company’s wireless chief, Mehrdad Akbar, would only say: “As it is our commitment to always lead on price, we are going to reduce the price on this most popular smartphone so our customers can realize these new saving as soon as possible.”

    So, if you’re looking for a deal on an iPhone, Walmart may be the place to go — unless you want to just wait around for a new model to show up on a barstool near you.

    Wal-Mart Cuts Price on iPhone 3GS [WSJ]

  • Home Buyers Should Celebrate the Greek Debt Crisis

    How might the Greek debt crisis be good for the United States?

    Last week, we counted three possibilities: cheaper oil, greater international investment in the United States (as investors flee the eurozone for America’s embrace), and a longer period of easy money from the Federal Reserve. Today, the Wall Street Journal’s Nick Timiraos finds a fourth, related benefit for the United States in the short term: historic low mortgage rates despite the Federal Reserve pulling back its mortgage-securities purchase program.

    Conventional wisdom held that mortgage rates would rise as the Fed pulled back from propping up the market. Instead,
    many in the industry now say rates could drift as low as 4.5% this
    summer from 4.86% now, instead of rising to 6% as some economists
    projected, making for significantly lower payments for Americans buying
    homes or refinancing their mortgages.

    Here’s what’s happening. The European crisis is making investors nervous about buying bonds from countries across the Atlantic. So they’re flocking to park their cash in US debt. High demand for US debt drives down the yield, or interest rate, on our bonds. Mortgage rates hold hands with the 10-year Treasury yield, which fell to 3.2% last week. That brought rates on 15-year mortgages down to 4.24% last week, “the lowest since Freddie began its survey in 1991,” according to Timiraos. Thirty-year mortgage rates are back to their December 2009 levels.

    This is good news for a home market some feared would face a terrible summer. Since the $8,000 housing credit expired last month, some worried that the demand for new homes had squeezed itself into the first four months of 2010. But the return of low interest rates could make for a buyers market, since every percentage point decline in mortgage rates reduces home prices for the buyer by roughly a 10%. “If the current rates hold,” Timiraos writes, “that could help
    stabilize prices and allow current homeowners to sell existing homes
    without substantial price cuts.”

    Update: The headline comes with a caveat: unless those home owners recently bought stock.





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  • Even a 10-year old can replace an iPhone’s glass


    Don’t cry to AT&T or Apple if you crack your iPhone screen. They don’t care. Besides as this pictures and Cnet story clearly shows, with a bit of patience, nearly anyone can replace an iPhone screen. This 10-year boy used a $20 kit available from 3gcrackedglass.com to replace the glass on his dad’s iPhone and in turn saved him from the $200 repair bill that Apple would have charged for the same service.

    But it’s not the act of saving this particular iPhone that’s compelling. Think about how proud this dad must feel watching his 10-year preform the operation. I get excited when my 3-year old son hits the baseball off the T ball stand. Fatherhood is great.


  • Can BroadVision Rise From the Ashes of Web 1.0?

    BroadVision, an enterprise software company with a long and not-so-glorious history, today launched a new offering called Clearvale — what it calls a “network of networks” designed to bring social networking to businesses on a large scale, just as earlier versions of the company’s software allowed them to create Web 1.0 “portals.” The company said more than 4,000 businesses are already using the hosted software-as-a-service platform, as part of a year-long beta test. The launch also includes a strategic partnership with Softbank, the giant Japanese telecom and media holdings company.

    The idea behind Clearvale is to provide a white-label social networking platform similar to Ning, but focused specifically on businesses. “We were among the first technology companies to help the enterprise understand how to do business on the web, and we feel poised to do it again — but this time for the Enterprise 2.0 era,” said Pehong Chen, founder and CEO. As part of the rollout of Clearvale, the company says it will be offering an app store for social networking tools, driven by an open API.

    The name BroadVision may not be as well known as Netscape or Yahoo, but the company was one of the original Web 1.0 superstars. It went public not long after Netscape set the market for web companies on fire in 1995, but failed to make it through the web bust of the late 1990s. The stock was delisted from the Nasdaq for a time, and Chen said that BroadVision spent the past decade or so restructuring financially and becoming a much smaller business and is now ready to be reborn as a Web 2.0 software provider, offering custom social networks for businesses. In effect, Chen said he’s betting the company on this new strategy.

    “We were a pioneer of e-business platforms, but we suffered because we overextended ourselves,” Chen told me in an interview prior to the Clearvale launch. “For the last decade we have been consumed with fixing that, mostly financially. We have survived, and have come back with a vengeance, with a solid balance sheet and lots of cash in the bank.” He said after watching the rise of social media and tools such as Facebook, he realized that businesses needed some way of creating “their own community online” and that BroadVision could offer that. Although software such as Yammer, Socialcast and Jive offer elements of this, Chen said no one had an “all-in-one” solution like BroadVision.

    Although Clearvale can be implemented as company-hosted software for institutions such as banks and others that need to control their software more closely, Chen said it’s designed to be a social networking platform in the cloud, hosted primarily by Amazon’s EC2 infrastructure but also by major partners such as Softbank, which Chen said intends to offer social networking features to its mobile customers that are based on Clearvale. Companies such as Synaptics and Air Exchange are already using the software to create internal networks for staff and suppliers, he said. (For more on the cloud, attend the GigaOM Network’s annual cloud computing conference, Structure, June 23 & 24 in San Francisco.)

    BroadVision’s existing business — building and managing web portals for companies — continues to make money, Chen says, but it has become a much smaller business than it was in the red-hot Web 1.0 days. Last year, the company had sales of $28 million, while at the peak it brought in close to 10 times that amount every year. “We may be smaller, but we are smarter,” Chen said. And what about competition from Microsoft’s SharePoint and other enterprise solutions? The BroadVision CEO said that Microsoft in particular has an existing legacy businesses that it has to protect. BroadVision, one the other hand, “doesn’t really have a lot to lose,” he said.

    At first glance, Clearvale looks a little like BroadVision came up with the product while playing Web 2.0 “buzzword bingo” — it has social networking, is in the cloud, has an open API and an app store, and so on. But Chen is right that many businesses are looking for easy ways to implement social networking tools inside their companies, and BroadVision has an established reputation as an enterprise-software vendor. Whether it can make the transition to being a Web 2.0 company remains to be seen.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Can Enterprise Privacy Survive Social Networking?



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Yingli Shelves North America Plant… for Now

    The falling Euro hurts Yingli Green Energy Americas

    Yingli Green Energy Americas, Inc. has shelved plans to open a new North American manufacturing facility in either Austin or Phoenix, citing global financial turmoil that is hurting solar panel pricing.

    Yingli’s U.S. Managing director Robert Petrina tells the Austin American-Statesman that the project is merely on hold and, “the U.S. is a big part of our plans.” However, the company is seeing its main advantage over Western solar PV firms – its low production costs – evaporate as the Euro and solar panel prices fall.

    Petrina said that the instability in the solar market has made the company hesitant to commit to a large project right now.

    He said the company is looking for the pricing levels to stabilize before making its final decision to locate its plant in either Phoenix or Austin.

    Until yesterday’s announcement, parent company Yingli Green Energy looked ready to conquer the globe.

    Company executives purchased a costly, but bold, 2010 World Cup sponsorship in February and watched as officials in Phoenix and Austin wooed the company with incentives to locate its new plant in their respective cities

    Yingli announced some solid operational results yesterday, with record gross margins of 33.3 percent, but recorded a $24.7 million foreign exchange loss.

    The foreign exchange problem points to a more general concern with Chinese green energy companies – they compete on price not on technology so they’re especially sensitive to currency shifts.

    Barclays Capital Clean Technology Analyst Vishal Shah said today that Yingli was operationally strong but lowered his estimates to account for exchange loss and a weaker Euro.

  • Subaru apresenta o novo Impreza Cosworth

    Imagens do veículo

    Foi anunciado pela Subaru, oficialmente e finalmente, as primeiras informações do novo Impreza Cosworth STI CS400, uma nova edição do clássico veículo que foi desenvolvido em parceria com a Cosworth. Essa versão “humilde” marca o retorno da Cosworth aos carros de rua, depois de passar um tempo desenvolvendo veículos poderosos para provas de Rally, como o Ford Escort e o Sierra Cosworth.

    Dentro do novo Impreza não existe tanta humildade assim, já que o capô esconde um motor com algumas modificações mecânicas que proporcionam nada menos do que 400 cv de potência, um aumento de 95 cv em relação ao Impreza WRX STi.

    Com tamanha potência, o Impreza Cosworth atinge acelera dos 0 aos 100 Km/h em 3,7 segundos, tão rápido quanto um Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 e dois segundos a menos que o Focus RS500. Outras mudanças nessa nova versão estão na suspensão alterada, que deixa o Impreza mais rebaixado, e um novo sistema de freios com discos maiores. Serão fabricados 75 unidades do Impreza Cosworth e custarão 49.995 Libras (R$ 135.695,00). Vejam algumas fotos a seguir.

    Imagens do veículo
    Imagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículoImagens do veículo

    Via | Auto Portal


  • Walmart Employee Fired After Trying To Stop A Shoplifter

    Here’s a sad story from Wichita, KS: A Walmart customer service manager noticed a man walking out of the store with a computer. She stopped him to ask for his receipt after the alarm went off and got punched and kicked for her trouble. After that, she got fired.

    From Kansas.com:

    The next day, about two hours before her shift was over, [the woman] says an assistant manager asked to speak with her. He then told her it’s against Wal-Mart policy for anyone but a manager or someone in asset protection to try and stop a customer from stealing.

    “He said there’s really no gray area,” [the woman] says. “It just goes straight to termination.”

    She was told to turn in her badges and keys.

    “I was in shock at first,” [the woman] says. “I didn’t think anything like this would happen.”

    Nor did she know about the policy, [the woman] says.

    “I’ve never heard of it.”

    Walmart says they’re sorry but policy is policy.

    “While we appreciate her intentions, [the employee’s] actions put her safety — and perhaps the safety of our customers — in jeopardy and, in the process, violated company policy as it pertains to how we treat people in our stores. As an unfortunate result of these circumstances, [she] is no longer employed by our company.”

    She told the Wichita Eagle that she would be filing for unemployment and looking for another job — hopefully not in retail.

    Wal-Mart employee foils a shoplifter — and loses her job [Kansas]

  • Russia ex-PM testifies Khodorkovsky arrest politically motivated

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] Former Russian prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov [BBC profile] on Monday testified that former president Vladimir Putin [official website; JURIST news archive] ordered the arrest of former oil executive Mikhail Khodorkovsky [defense website; JURIST news archive] for political reasons. Testifying before the Khamovnichesky District Court, Kasyanov stated [Moscow Times report] that after questioning Putin on the subject several times, he finally indicated that Khodorkovsky had funded the Communist Party [party website, in Russian] without first getting approval to do so from the president, prompting the arrest. The left-leaning Union of Right Forces and Yabloko [party websites, in Russian] have acknowledged receiving funding from Khodorkovsky, which, according to Kasyanov, was authorized by Putin, but the Communist Party has denied ties to Khodorkovsky. Kasyanov went on to criticize [NYT report] the practice of seeking secret presidential approval for the otherwise legal funding of political parties. Kasyanov served as prime minister under Putin from 2000 to 2004, before being dismissed along with the entire cabinet, and has since become critical of Putin. Putin currently serves as prime minister under President Dmitri Medvedev [official website; BBC profile].

    Last week, Khodorkovsky ended a two-day hunger strike [JURIST report] after a spokesperson for Medvedev indicated that Medvedev was familiar with a complaint Khodorkovsky made regarding the three-month extension of his detention. Also last week, Khodorkovsky sent an open letter to Russia’s Supreme Court [official website, in Russian] contending that Russian courts are ignoring recent changes in the law that allow people charged with economic crimes to be released on bail pending the outcome of their trials. Khodorkovsky indicated the goal of his hunger strike had been achieved [press release], and that his intention was to change the judicial system going forward and not his current situation. Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev [defense website] are currently serving eight-year prison sentences after being convicted [JURIST report] in 2005 on fraud and tax evasion charges stemming from an attempt to embezzle and strip their Yukos [JURIST news archive] oil company of valuable assets. They are now charged with embezzling [JURIST report] USD $25 billion worth of oil produced by Yukos. The men have pleaded not guilty [JURIST report] to the current charges, and face up to 20 additional years in prison if convicted.

  • Marla Gurecki-Haskins: Teacher Faces Sex Charges

    36-year-old teacher Marla Gurecki-Haskins was accused for having sex with a 17-year-old male student.

    Marla Gurecki-Haskins, a teacher at Canandaigua Academy since 1995, turned herself in after being accused of felony count of disseminating indecent material to a minor and three misdemeanor counts of official misconduct and endangering the welfare of a child.

    According to the police, the teacher performed oral sex on a 17-year-old male student in a classroom during school hours. She is also “participating in the nature of text messaging that encourages sexual intercourse between the accused and two male students 16 years of age,” according to court documents.

    She pleaded guilty on all counts of sex charges and was released on his own responsibility. Police say more charges could be filed.

    Police have been investigating these accusations since early April. Their investigation is not yet over for they still have almost 2,500 pages of material, mostly emails and text messages to examine.

    Related posts:

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    2. High School Teacher Sent Nude Photos of Herself to a Student!
    3. Melissa Huckaby pleads guilty in murdering of Sandra Cantu‎

  • Cosworth puts the spurs to Subaru’s Impreza WRX STI

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    Cosworth Impreza STI CS400 – Click above for image gallery

    This is the Cosworth Impreza STI CS400, the car Cosworth said would “humble” supercars. With a 0-to-62 sprint happening in just 3.7 seconds it’ll be quicker than a whole bunch of exotics, and at £49,995 ($71,368 U.S.), it’ll be a whole lot cheaper as well. If that sounds like a boatload of cash for a warmed-over WRX, well, it is. But bear in mind that thanks to factors like the 17.5 percent Value Added Tax, UK pricing is rather different than what pricing in the States would likely look like were Cosworth to sell the CS400 here.

    The 395-horsepower, 398-pound-foot Cossie Scooby benefits from a thorough rework of its boxer-engined details, boasting new pistons, con-rods, turbocharger, exhaust and ECU mapping among its many modifications. Aiding the Impreza‘s all-wheel drive get power to the ground is a lowered suspension with components from Bilstein and Eibach.

    Looks-wise, a different front bumper fitted with mesh inserts, a rear spoiler, a track widened by 12 millimeters, and 18-inch alloys over bigger AP brakes will make sure Subaru cognescenti don’t confuse you with anything else. Identification will also be made easier by the fact that there will only be 75 made for the UK market only, and available it’ll be available in red, silver, and dark gray. Thanks to everyone for the tips!

    [Source: Cosworth via Autocar]

    Cosworth puts the spurs to Subaru’s Impreza WRX STI originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 09:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Looking ahead in retirement at Xerox …

    Day 187 from pasukaru on FlickrChildren, fiction writers and futurists like to play various versions of “what if” — all of us do now and then; it’s part of what makes us human. But few get to make it come true in quite the same way that corporate officers sometimes can.

    Anne Mulcahy got to do it late last week, for example, when she stepped down as the chairman of Xerox Corp. (XRX) after 34 years at the company; she started as a sales rep in 1976. Ursula M. Burns, the company’s chief executive, assumed the chairmanship as of May 20.

    Mulcahy’s departure was effective the same day, but in at least one sense she gets to retire like it’s 2011. According to the 8-K that Xerox filed late on Friday afternoon:

    “the Compensation Committee of Registrant’s Board of Directors, in accordance with the terms of the applicable agreement, accelerated the vesting of the Long Term Cash Incentive Award made to Mrs. Mulcahy on June 30, 2009 (as described in the Proxy Statement) in an amount equal to what Mrs. Mulcahy would receive had her retirement occurred on or after the July 1, 2011 original vesting date.”

    In other words, retire today, get a long-term cash bonus paid as if you retired 13 months later. Assuming her departure was indeed voluntary — there’s no reason to think otherwise, but it does sometimes turn out that senior executives are asked to step down — the proxy says she would have walked away on Dec. 31 with a total of $31.4 million, including $2.6 million in non-equity incentive awards, $6.4 million from equity incentive awards and $22.4 million in pension benefits — plus another $2.6 million in accumulated deferred compensation on top of that. It’s probably safe to assume the figure last week is pretty similar. (Involuntary termination without cause would add $1 million in cash to those figures.)

    One of the big recent accomplishments from Burns and Mulcahy, we’ve already observed, was the recent acquisition of Affiliated Computer Services, with the attendant 2,500 layoffs. No doubt some of them would have liked to get a check on the way out the door that looked ahead to 2011 as well.

    Image source: pasukaru via Flickr

  • New Animals in the Workplace Policy for Knoxville Campus

    To protect the health and safety of employees, students and visitors, and to maintain a professional and clean environment in which to study, work, conduct research and visit, pets are not allowed in any buildings owned or leased by the Knoxville campus with a few exceptions.

    UT Knoxville recognizes the important role pets play in the lives of many faculty, staff and students. The university also recognizes that some members of our community may have concerns regarding health — especially allergies — as well as safety as it relates to pets in the workplace.

    The campus has a new policy relating to animals in the workplace. Please review the policy and help ensure all faculty and staff are made aware of the policy. You can review it at the Office of Budget and Finance website.

    Service animals, as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, are permissible for use by faculty, staff and students. Faculty or staff who require a service animal should consult with the Office of Equity and Diversity. Service animals, including Human Animal Bond in Tennessee (HABIT) animals, are permitted only when they are working in appropriate locations or as a part of the evaluations process.

    Approved research and instructional animals, animals professionally trained for theatrical purposes, those trained for law enforcement or search and rescue activities, animals in official university-approved parades on campus and official university mascots — including opposing teams — are allowed.

    The policy only applies to the Knoxville campus. It is not a university-wide fiscal or human resource policy. For more info e-mail [email protected].

  • Google Generated $54 Billion for Small Businesses in 2009

    Google’s image is probably one of its biggest assets and, even as it generates tens of billions of dollars in revenue, it’s still seen as a company that can do no wrong. But that has been changing lately especially in the eyes of regulators and government officials who are uneasy with Google’s increasing dominance on the onlin… (read more)

  • Adolescents Cope with Mental Illness Stigmas, Report CWRU Researchers

    Living with a mental illness can be a tough experience for adults, but with the increasing numbers of youth diagnosed and taking medications for mood disorders, it can become a time of isolation, according to a study from Case Western Reserve University Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences.

    In one of the first studies of adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 with mental illnesses and taking medications, researchers found that at least 90 percent of the study’s participants reported experiencing some form of stigma. It has lead to shame, secrecy and limiting social interactions.

    Forty adolescents in the study reported that the attitudes of parents and schools either protect against or magnify the youth’s feelings of being different or ashamed that they have a mental illness.

    Much is known about the stigmas suffered by adults, but researchers wanted to determine how similar or different the adolescent experience is from the adult one.

    The findings from this stigma study came from a secondary data from a major study that investigated the subjective experience of adolescent psychotropic treatment.

    Individuals, young and old, with mental illnesses suffer from public and self-stigmas. The researchers were concerned about how the youth internalized the public discrimination, or stereotyping of their illnesses, and if these stigmas experienced at a young age might impact the individuals as adults.

    Parents were found to be either positive or negative key players in buffering their child against these stigmas by helping them lead a normal life or they can contribute to the youth’s feelings of being different.

    “Parents, who embrace and love their children for whom they are and accept the illness as part of their child’s being, help their children overcome these stigmas,” said Derrick Kranke, the lead author on an article in Children and Youth Services Review article, “Stigma Experience Among Adolescents Taking Psychiatric Medications.”

    Besides parents, the researchers found that the school environment can have devastating effects upon the youth if they feel ostracized by their peers and teachers. The ostracism can lead youths to drop out of school, or worse, commit suicide.

    Kranke, a former elementary school teacher, is a Case Western Reserve University postdoctoral scholar at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences at Case Western Reserve University.

    He said the study’s information aided researchers in building a model to demonstrate how stigmas impact young people. Educators and social workers can design interventions to break the cycle in schools and help students accept their illnesses and become integrated into the school environment.

    This new study builds on another study underway at CWRU about the transition from home to college for students with mental illnesses and who take psychotropic drugs experience. .

    “If parents ask at orientation what can be done to help their child’s transition, it’s too late,” Kranke said, Coping with stigmas needs to begin as early as the diagnosis and the onset of medications, he explained.

    In an effort to understand what happens before these students arrive on campuses, Kranke studied 40 youths between 12 and 17. The students described their experiences during interviews and answered questions adapted from an adult stigma survey. Kranke also interviewed their parents about their child’s mental illness.

    The group studied was comprised of 60 percent females and 40 percent males. On average, the youth take two psychiatric medications. The most common mood disorders in the group were bipolar disorder and depression. More than half the group had more than one diagnosed mental illness.

    Other researchers contributing to the paper were Jerry Floersch from Rutgers University and Lisa Townsend and Michelle Munson from the social work school at CWRU. Funding for the study came from the National Institute of Mental Health.

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • Fundraising ideas for non profit organizations

    Looking for a fun way to raise money for your non profit organization this summer? Your friends at fasttrackfundraising.com have a great suggestion – online magazine sales! Fasttrack Fundraising gives non profit organizations an easy and convenient way to sell a product without having to hand out catalogs or forms, add up orders, or collect any money!

    I don’t personally know anyone who doesn’t subscribe to at least one magazine. Non profit organizations can create their own magazine fundraisers and earn a percentage of the sales on a product most people pay full price for anyway! It’s a heck of a lot easier than a bake sale or a car wash 🙂

    If selling magazines doesn’t sound like the right product for your group, there are lots more great fundraising ideas for non profits, like selling popcorn, scented pencils, lollipops, even beef jerky! Register your non profit organization and get started on achieving your fundraising goals today!

  • Sustainable Montana home trains students

    Montana State student teams will collaborate with suppliers to build an ecoSmart home in the Bozeman area.  The house will feature a number of technologies, but will focus on passive heating.  …

    …   “Because of REHAU‘s involvement, a variety of other suppliers joined in the project, which will feature such sustainable building technologies as geothermal ground loop heat exchange, ground-air heat exchange; radiant heating and cooling; solar thermal energy for hot water; and insulating concrete forms.”   …

    Via Montana State University: Bozeman Sustainable House.

  • Video: T-mobile myTouch 3G Slide unboxed in front of your very eyes

    T-Mobile myTouch 3G Slide packagingWe’ve already gotten word of the T-mobile myTouch 3G Slide specs. We also know that it will be released on the 2nd of June for $179.99. We’ve even had our own hands-on. But there is one little maneuver left in the dance of phone revelations: the unboxing.

    And here it is.

    Android Community have gotten their hands on the retail packaging for the upcoming QWERTY Android device, and I felt that it was nice enough to share with you. It comes in a metal box! I don’t know if it’s just the 10 year old in me, but I think that’s pretty cool.

    They also have a slew of photos of the device, including UI shots, and the included accessories.

    Check the video out, below!

    (Pro tip, stay on past the 3:30 minute mark for some merengue beats. Most suitable for this final manoeuvre!)