Wednesday, October 9, 2013

CASA Of Union County To Hold ?Foster the Dream? Gala

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calendarUNION COUNTY ??With approximately 600 children in the Union County foster care system that need help in finding permanency, a new annual gala aims to foster their dream. CASA of Union County will hold its inaugural ?Foster the Dream? Gala paying tribute to Judge Jo-Anne B. Spatola on Friday, Oct. 18th at 7 p.m. in the Clubhouse at Galloping Hill Golf Course in Kenilworth.

CASA of Union County currently provides volunteer court advocates for 98 foster children and hopes to one day provide a CASA volunteer to every foster child in the county. The new fundraising gala aims to make this dream a reality.

The evening will begin with an open bar cocktail reception with live entertainment where guests will have a chance to mingle, bid in the silent auction or step outside on the terrace to enjoy breathtaking views of the Galloping Hill Golf Course. The cocktail reception will be followed by dinner and a live auction featuring extravagant packages including a vacation getaway to Iceland, exclusive tickets to New York Fashion Week and an at-home chef package for 10.

The ?Foster the Dream? Gala will be paying special tribute to the Honorable Judge Jo-Anne B. Spatola for her dedication to the needs of foster children and CASA. The evening will also feature the ?Dream-Keeper Award for Outstanding Volunteerism? which will be presented to a current CASA volunteer.

?The funds raised from the Foster the Dream Gala are vital to ensuring CASA can continue providing volunteer advocates for foster children in Union County,? said Dominic Prophete, CASA of Union County?s Executive Director. ?For many abused and neglected children, their CASA volunteer is the one constant voice in their lives. Our goal is to provide a volunteer for every foster child and shape the future for them.? CASA volunteers are appointed by family court to watch over and advocate for children in foster care. Volunteers stay with each case until it is closed and the child they have grown to care for is placed in a safe and permanent home.

The ticket price for the gala is $125 along with sponsorship opportunities including a $20,000 Lead Sponsor, $15,000 Platinum Sponsors, $10,000 Gold Sponsors, $5,000 Silver Sponsor and $2,500 Bronze Sponsors. For information or to purchase tickets visit www.casaofunioncounty.org or contact Victoria Curtis at vcurtis@casaofunioncounty.org.

The Breadwinner, a novel by Stevie Kopas

Source: http://njtoday.net/2013/10/09/casa-of-union-county-to-hold-foster-the-dream-gala/

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Florida man says USPS lost his father in the mail

SPRINGFIELD, Vt. -

It's been two weeks since John Shaffer received the package at his sister's house in Springfield.? But his disappointment over what he found inside is still palpable.? "Pops always said he wanted to come home," Shaffer said.

The package was supposed to contain an urn holding some of his late father's remains. The rest are in Florida where he passed away from cancer last year. "His parents are buried up here -- a little cemetery in Bellows Falls -- and he just said it would be good to be taken home.? So that's where he'd be close to gram and gramps.? That's why I figured I would bring part of him home.? At least he is with his parents," Shaffer said.

Shaffer's finance mailed the package from Florida.? The Cocoa, Florida resident was already in Vermont.? When he received it, he knew immediately something was wrong -- torn edges, crumpled corners and tape covered it.? "And to see the box, the condition it was when I got it, I was like kind of freaked out because I'm like, I hope everything is in there.? And then when I started digging through and come to find out he is not there, I got emotional -- between getting emotional and getting mad," Shaffer said.
?
And then confusion.? Children's clothes, not in the original shipment, were now inside.? Shaffer notified the United States Postal Service immediately.? In a statement to Channel 3 News The USPS said: "We have a robust investigation ongoing... This includes action in Vermont, Florida and our Mail Recovery Center where unidentified items that become separated from packaging during mail handling are directed."

Shaffer is waiting on the results of that investigation.? In the meantime he's trying to stay positive -- like his mom, who was married to the same man for 42 years. "You know my dad was a traveling man.? He was a truck driver for years and he always liked to travel.? And mom said, you know, he just out there traveling again.? You know, it kind of gave me a little chuckle," Shaffer said.

But he wants the remains back. "It's a small urn -- about 3 inches tall, bluish green with gold -- and it is my dad.? I would like to get it back," he said. "My dad was my man -- my number one guy," he said.

A son struggling with losing his father -- twice.

?

Source: http://www.wcax.com/story/23630523/florida-man-says-usps-lost-his-father-in-the-mail

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Fantasy football: Week 6 advice from NFL experts

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By The Oakland Press

Posted: ? 09/30/2013 08:45:20 PM EDT


Source: http://www.sentinelandenterprise.com/ci_24207842/fantasy-football-week-5-advice-from-nfl-experts?source=rss_viewed

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Smith, Folk lead New York Jets past Falcons 30-28

ATLANTA (AP) ? Geno Smith wasn't flustered. Not after all the mistakes in his first four games. Not after the Atlanta Falcons went ahead on a touchdown with less than 2 minutes remaining.

Looking like a wily ol' veteran instead of a rookie, Smith calmly guided the New York Jets to another victory.

Smith threw three touchdown passes and directed a drive that set up Nick Folk's 43-yard field goal on the final play, giving the Jets a 30-28 victory over the staggering Falcons on Monday night.

"It's always been a dream of mine since I was a kid to be in those situations," Smith said.

After the Falcons went ahead on Matt Ryan's 3-yard touchdown pass to Levine Toilolo with 1:54 remaining, Smith completed four straight passes and broke off an 8-yard run that set up Folk's field goal as time expired.

The Jets (3-2) have been waiting for this sort of performance from Smith, who came into the game leading the NFL with 11 turnovers, including eight interceptions. He completed 16 of 20 passes for 199 yards and threw almost as many touchdown passes as the four he had in the first four games.

"My confidence is always sky-high," Smith said. "Nothing can bring me down."

Smith put in extra work at practice to cut down on the turnovers, and it sure paid off. He was sacked four times but never lost the ball.

"It's a mindset," he said. "I made it my duty to come out here and not put the ball on the ground and not put my team in jeopardy."

The Falcons (1-4) rallied from a 27-14 deficit in the fourth quarter. Jacquizz Rodgers scored on a pair of touchdown runs, and Ryan also threw a scoring pass to Jason Snelling.

But they couldn't stop Smith when it mattered.

"He's a rookie," Atlanta safety William Moore said, "and we make him look like a 10-year veteran."

Considered a Super Bowl contender at the beginning of the season, Atlanta is mired in a three-game longest losing streak ? its longest since 2007 ? heading into a bye week.

The Jets led 17-7 after a goal-line stand on the final play of the first half, which turned out to be awful big at the end of the game.

Atlanta had two cracks at the end zone on fourth-and-goal from the 1. The first attempt resulted in an incomplete pass, but the Jets were called for pass interference when they grabbed Tony Gonzalez as he tried to get open.

The Falcons again passed on a chip-shot field goal, and curiously decided to hand it to their smallest back ? Rodgers is just 5-foot-6 and 196 pounds ? for a power run behind their shaky offensive line. Rodgers was swallowed up by the New York line, sending the Jets racing off the field in celebration while the Falcons staggered to their locker room to a round of boos from the Georgia Dome crowd.

Rodgers and the Falcons rallied in the second half.

The diminutive back scored on a 4-yard run midway through the third quarter, then broke off a 19-yard score to cut the Jets' lead to 27-21 with 8:10 remaining. The Falcons finally surged ahead, taking advantage of a holding call on Demario Davis after the Jets batted down a pass to Rodgers. Two plays later, Ryan hooked up with Toilolo, a tight end known more for his blocking.

But New York had plenty of time to pull off the winning drive.

Smith completed a 12-yard pass to Stephen Hill, a 13 yarder to Jeremy Kerley, and went to Hill again on a 9-yarder. Smith scrambled around left end to the Atlanta 38. After one more Smith completion, the Jets let the clock run down and sent on their kicker.

There was no doubt about it.

"I hit it pretty solid," Folk said. "As soon as I saw it go and get up in the air, I knew it was pretty good."

Ryan completed 36 of 45 passes for 319 yards. Gonzalez hauled in 10 receptions for 97 yards and became just the second player in NFL history to catch a pass in 200 consecutive games, trailing only Jerry Rice (274). Julio Jones had eight catches for 99 yards.

The Falcons were missing six starters because of injuries, and the medical report grew longer. Receiver Roddy White went out with a hamstring injury, and Snelling didn't return after sustaining a concussion. In the fourth quarter, Atlanta got so far down the depth chart that a trio of third stringers contributed ? Kevin Cone caught a big third-down pass, Antone Smith broke off a key run, and Toilolo grabbed the go-ahead touchdown.

It wasn't enough.

"What are we going to do, sit here and feel sorry for ourselves?" Gonzalez said. "I'm not going to put my hands up and say the season is over."

NOTES: Mike Goodson rushed for 32 yards on three carries in his first game for the Jets. He was suspended the first four games for violating the NFL's substance-abuse policy. ... The Jets rushed for 118 yards on 22 carries, averaging 5.4 yards. ... Osi Umenyiora had two sacks for Atlanta.

___

AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com.pnewberry1963

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/smith-folk-lead-york-jets-past-falcons-30-033838090--spt.html

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Stetson University says no to smoking on campuses

Chris Goodney

Smoking and tobacco-related products will be prohibited starting Aug. 1, 2014, on Stetson University residential campuses.

Pam Huff, Tampa Bay Business Journal

Smoking and tobacco-related products will be prohibited starting Aug. 1, 2014, on Stetson University residential campuses, the Tampa Bay Business Journal reports.

The DeLand-based university announced Monday it will enact the policy and prohibit all forms of tobacco use, including e-cigarettes and other smokeless products in buildings, structures, grounds, parking lots and in university and personal vehicles while on Stetson property, according to a statement.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_35/~3/iDUHnlzZSXU/stetson-university-says-no-to-smoking.html

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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

At Twitter, global growth tests free speech advocacy

Social media

8 hours ago

An employee works near a sign at Twitter headquarters in San Francisco, California October 4, 2013. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

? Robert Galbraith / Reuters

An employee works near a sign at Twitter headquarters in San Francisco, California October 4, 2013.

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - When a Brazilian state prosecutor last year set out to silence anonymous Twitter messages that were revealing the location of drunk-driving checkpoints, he served the social media company's just-opened Sao Paolo office with a lawsuit.

Sharing sightings of police checkpoints does not violate any rules set by Twitter Inc, which has far fewer restrictions on content than social media rivals such as Facebook Inc. Nor would such tweets be a crime in the United States. Twitter has traditionally resisted efforts to obtain the identity of users whose words might be regarded as a crime.

But in Brazil, Twitter quickly handed over the Internet protocol addresses of three accounts as a demonstration of its "good faith, respect and will to cooperate with the Brazilian judicial power," the company's lawyers said in a legal filing last October.

Even that wasn't enough: the lawsuit, which demands that the company bar any such accounts in the future, is ongoing.

The situation in Brazil is a microcosm of the public policy and business challenges facing Twitter as it seeks to translate global popularity into profits.

Related:?Nearing IPO, Twitter starts thinking a little more like Facebook

Since its inception, the 140-character messaging service's simplicity and mobile-friendly nature ? it can be used by any cellphone with a text-messaging function ? has helped speed its global adoption as a source of real-time information. Unlike many social media services, it can be used anonymously.

The company's laissez-faire approach to monitoring content, together with an aggressive posture in challenging government censorship requests and demands for customer information, have made it the darling of civil liberties advocates and political protesters from New York's Zuccotti Park to Cairo's Tahrir Square.

But now, as it prepares to become a public company with a valuation expected to exceed $10 billion, Twitter must figure out how to make money outside the U.S. International customers make up more than 75 percent of Twitter users, but only 25 percent of sales come from overseas.

That means opening offices and employing people on the ground: there are now seven overseas offices and counting. And that, in turn, means complying with local laws - even when they conflict with the company's oft-stated positioning as "the free-speech wing of the free-speech party."

Related:?Careful what you tweet: Police, schools tap social media to track behavior

These conflicts, paradoxically, arise not so much in countries with repressive governments ? the service is banned outright in China, for instance ? but rather in countries with Western-style democracies, including Brazil, Germany, France, Britain and India.

"There are a bunch of countries that you can't treat like China because they have democratic systems and they abide by the rule of law, but they have speech restrictions that we would find objectionable," said Andrew McLaughlin, a former director of global public policy at Google Inc and White House technology official who is now chief executive of news website Digg. "Those are the issues where the rubber hits the road on free speech."

In Twitter's initial public offering prospectus, which was made public last week, there was only an oblique mention of protecting speech. The company said its corporate mission was to facilitate the dissemination of "ideas and information instantly without barriers," and that "our business and revenue will always follow that mission in ways that improve ? and do not detract from ? a free and global conversation."

Alex Macgillivray, the former general counsel who coined the company's free speech slogan and was widely regarded as a staunch civil libertarian, left the company in September.

Twitter declined to comment about potential conflicts between its business goals and its free-speech advocacy in general, or any specific cases.

There's certainly no shortage of political chatter on Twitter, and world leaders ranging from Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to Pope Francis have taken to the service as a means of communicating directly with constituents.

Activists say they haven't seen Twitter backing away from its free-speech policies yet ? but they're wary.

"Twitter has always been an ally," said Hisham Almiraat, a Moroccan blogger who manages the anti-censorship website Global Voices Advocacy. "As soon as Twitter becomes public, it needs to be accountable to its shareholders, and its strategy becomes more short-term. If Twitter, for reasons of greed, or because they are politically compelled, decides to change that core philosophy, then I'll worry."

Opportunity in Brazil
A booming, social media-loving country of more than 80 million Internet users, Brazil perennially ranks among Twitter's most active markets. When the company set up operations in Sao Paolo in late 2012, the company's top sales executive, Adam Bain, described the opportunity in the country as "amazing from a business perspective."

As in many Latin American nations, the service is used by everyone from the president on down. And with Twitter proving to be a powerful companion medium for sports and other forms of televised entertainment, Brazil's role as host of the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games make it an especially attractive target.

Yet the broad adoption of Twitter has not been accompanied by broad tolerance of the free-wheeling conversations that characterize social media in general and Twitter in particular. Brazilian government bodies regularly file more requests for user information or content removal than any country other than the U.S., according to transparency reports published periodically by companies including Twitter and Google.

Luis Fernando Canedo, the prosecutor in Brazil, described his case over the driving checkpoints as a landmark for the country - and also for Twitter, which had never before been sued by a government.

"Social networks are a relatively new reality and so is their impact," Canedo told Reuters. "There are future situations today we can't even imagine and in which the State will have to position itself in front of certain illegal, harmful practices being carried out over the Internet."

His case has not exactly gone smoothly. Even after obtaining Internet addresses from Twitter, the prosecutors misidentified the suspects behind the driving checkpoint Tweets.

They then dropped the case against the individuals, but still want Twitter to bar any such accounts in the future.

Hate speech in Europe
Twitter has long tried to hew to the position that users - not the company - are responsible for the content on the service. But last year it implemented a means of filtering Tweets by country, so that if it were forced to censor messages in one place it would still be able to show them in others.

That capability was used for the first time last October, when Twitter yielded to a request from German police to filter a neo-Nazi group's Twitter account so that users in Germany could not see it.

Earlier this year, just as Twitter's head of international strategy, Katie Jacobs Stanton, relocated to France to open Twitter's Paris office, Twitter's lawyers were fighting an order by a French court to reveal the email and IP addresses of users who had sent a spate of anti-Semitic tweets, which are prohibited under the country's hate-speech laws.

When Twitter exhausted its appeals in July, the company turned over the information.

In Britain, meanwhile, parliament in April passed a new defamation law that shifted liability to website operators for its users' posted content, which some observers said could hasten the end of online anonymity.

Like most global companies, Twitter has always acknowledged that it must obey the laws of the countries in which it operates. At the same time, though, it had little physical presence internationally and thus could take a hands-off approach.

Now, as Twitter grows its sales operation, absence is not a viable strategy.

"If you make the choice to operate in a country, you're subject to local laws," said Roy Gilbert, a former Google executive who set up the search giant's operations in India in 2004.

Twitter, moreover, may need local offices even more than some other Internet companies because its ad strategy depends on wooing large brand advertisers that need to be serviced by a direct sales presence, noted Clark Fredericksen, an analyst at eMarketer.

While Google can make money by allowing small businesses in a country to use its self-serve advertising platform, Twitter's self-serve ad product remains in its infancy and is only available in the U.S.

New problems
In countries such as Egypt and Turkey, Twitter has sought to avoid falling under local jurisdiction by selling ads through contractors, although it remains unclear whether the strategy will be tenable in the long run.

Amid massive anti-government protests fueled by organizers on Twitter this summer, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan threatened to shut down the service, which he called a "scourge."

His government called on Twitter to set up an office in the country so it would fall under Turkish law. Twitter rebuffed the request and weeks later posted a job for an executive in Dublin to manage ad resellers within Turkey.

Ozgur Uckan, a communication professor at Istanbul Bilgi University, said authorities may still be able to pressure the company by targeting its local partners. "The authorities may try to force Twitter to comply, using their regulation tools like tax issues," Uckan said.

In recent months, the ruling party backed away from its efforts to muzzle the service. Instead, it is adopting a tactic that has raised yet more questions about Twitter's future in the country.

The ruling AK Party recruited thousands of volunteers and paid workers to join Twitter, two party sources told Reuters. The pro-government volunteers have employed tactics such as reporting their political rivals as spammers, leading to their accounts' suspension.

"We decided to fight against them with their own tool and now we are more active on Twitter," said one party member, who asked not to be named.

The tactics proved so successful that Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo was pressed to make a statement in July denying that the company was cooperating with the Turkish government to suspend opposition accounts.

"You can't imagine the Internet without Twitter or Google. They are now considered the air you breathe," said Almiraat, the Moroccan blogger. "Now they're in a position of power, and they should be very careful with that power."

(Reporting by Gerry Shih in SAN FRANCISCO, Esteban Israel in SAO PAOLO, Matthew Smith in DUBAI, Parisa Hafezi in ANKARA, Andjarsari Paramaditha in JAKARTA; Editing by Jonathan Weber)

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/32340a03/sc/15/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Ctwitter0Eglobal0Egrowth0Etests0Efree0Espeech0Eadvocacy0E8C11356135/story01.htm

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Troy University to honor four with Alumni of the Year Awards

Troy University will honor four alumni during Homecoming festivities on Saturday, Oct. 5 with Alumni of the Year Awards.?Andy Davis of Dorchester, Mass., Sandra Gouge of Troy, Bobby Terrell of Greenville and Lon Wise of Pensacola, Fla. were selected by the Troy University Alumni Association Board of Directors based on outstanding professional accomplishments, civic achievements and loyalty and service to the University.?The four will be honored during halftime ceremonies at Saturday?s homecoming game against South Alabama. Kickoff is set for noon. In addition, the recipients will be honored at an invitation-only dinner Friday night and a breakfast reception on Saturday.?Andy DavisSince May 2012, Andy Davis has served as president of Carney Hospital in Dorchester, Mass. The 1992 TROY graduate began his career as a Certified Public Accountant and member of the health care services team for an accounting firm in Pensacola. In 1998, he joined Baptist Health Care in Pensacola as the hospital?s director of internal audit. While at Baptist Health Care, Davis also served as a member of the measurement team for patient satisfaction.?In 2000, Davis joined Health Management Associates and was appointed to a series of posts, including assistant chief financial officer for a hospital in Anniston, Ala., chief financial officer in Van Buren, Ark., and then chief operating officer for the Franklin Regional Medical Center in Louisburg, N.C. Davis later led Sandhills Regional Medical Center in Hamlet, N.C. as the hospital?s chief executive officer before being named chief executive officer of the Davis Regional Medical Center in Statesville, N.C.?A hallmark of Davis? career has been in consistent involvement in community organizations and charities, including local chambers of commerce, the United Way, Rotary, hospice organizations and workforce development programs. He holds both bachelor?s and master?s degrees from TROY and is a former member of the TROY basketball team.?Davis and his wife, Sonya, are the parents of a teenage daughter.?Sandra GougeSandra Gouge has more than 35 years as a professional in both the business and academic worlds. She currently serves as President of Gouge Marketing Group, LLC, an integrated marketing management and education firm.?Gouge devoted many years of her professional career to Troy University, retiring in 2010 after more than six years as Associate Vice Chancellor for Marketing and Communication. Prior to that post, she served as Chief Advancement Officer/Executive Assistant to the President and as Dean of Students on TROY?s Montgomery Campus. In addition, she has previously served in the following roles on the University?s Montgomery Campus: adjunct instructor, registrar, director of the Learning Resource Center, director of admissions and academic adviser.?Gouge and her husband, Fred, are lifetime members of the Troy University Alumni Association and were founding members of the TROY Shield Society. The couple resides in Troy and has one son, Cooper, a TROY alumnus.?Gouge is a member of the Administrative Council at Troy?s First United Methodist Church, the Board of Directors of the Pike County Chamber of Commerce, the Troy Rotary Club, the Montgomery Chamber of Commerce and the Pike County Chapter of the Troy University Alumni Association. She previously served as a member of the Alumni Association Board of Directors and the Board of Directors of the Johnson Center for the Arts. Gouge also is a member of the Robert E. Lee High School Hall of Fame in Montgomery.?Bobby TerrellBobby Terrell is Founder and Chairman of the Board of Terrell Enterprise, Inc., a company he began in 1975 to provide quality furniture and service to the education market in Alabama. Today, the Greenville-based business not only provides furniture solutions for schools but also for commercial, healthcare, hospitality and government applications. Through a partnership with Sport Court, the family-owned and operated business now also supplies a safe, high-performance modular sport surface to customers.?A 1959 graduate, Terrell was a member of both the TROY basketball and tennis teams during his time at the University. Immediately following graduation, he coached football and girls basketball in Blakely, Ga., before going to work for GMAC in Lake City, Fla. Terrell moved back to Greenville in 1964 and worked with American Seating Co. until 1975 when he decided to launch his own business.?An active member of the Greenville community, Terrell has coached little league baseball and football teams, been a member of the Jaycees and the Elks Club, an elder at Walnut Street Church of Christ and a lifetime member of the FDA Dunk Club at Fort Dale Academy due to his dedication and service to the school?s basketball team. He also made annual missionary trips to Guyana in South America for 22 years.?He is married to the former Mary Lou Brannon and the couple has four children, 10 grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Both are lifetime members of the TROY Alumni Association and active members of the Butler County Alumni Chapter.?Lon WiseLon Wise is the oldest living TROY football player. He and his wife, Mary, met during their time at what was then Troy State Teachers College.? Lon was a junior starting guard on the Red Wave football team and Mary was a transfer student when the two met in September of 1938. Mary went on to become Miss State Teachers College in 1938. The couple was married on Dec. 26, 1940.?Following graduation, Wise left to fight in World War II. He landed on Omaha Beach D-Day plus two and fought in the Battle of Brittany, the Battle of the Bulge and throughout Germany. Following the war, he served for a time as an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation before returning to his true calling ? teaching.?During his career in education, Wise served as principal of five schools in Escambia County and was the first principal of Pine Forest High School where he stayed until his retirement in 1980. The school?s stadium is named in his honor.?Wise?s legacy in education is one of building a school?s faculty to be the best it could be. Even in retirement, he remained active for more than 10 years as the Secondary School Association representative for Northwest Florida.?He and Mary have been married for 72 years and have three sons and three daughters. Wise has continued to be an avid supporter and contributor to Troy University through the years. Up until 2012, the couple regularly made the trip to TROY each year for Homecoming and to attend the annual World War II era alumni reunion.?For additional information about TROY?s Homecoming activities, contact the Alumni Affairs Office at 334-670-3318.?

Source: http://eastmontgomery.wsfa.com/news/community-spirit/412471-troy-university-honor-four-alumni-year-awards

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Monday, October 7, 2013

UK government teams with Google and Facebook to bring internet to all

THE UK GOVERNMENT will work alongside technology titans including Google and Facebook to help Sir Tim Berners-Lee in his mission to bring affordable internet to all.

The Alliance for Affordable Internet founded by Berners-Lee's World Wide Web Foundation received backing from the UK government on Monday, which will help the group reach its goal of bringing affordable internet to 90 percent of the global population that don't have access yet.

The group's mission is to bring entry-level broadband service to Asia and Africa, and to ensure it is priced at less than 5 percent of the country's average monthly income. At present, a basic fixed line broadband connection costs around a third of monthly income to those in developing countries, compared to an average of two percent in the UK and US.

Berners-Lee said lowering the cost is crucial to getting users in developing countries online, citing the fact that in Mozambique, 1GB of data can cost "well over" two months wages for the average citizen.

He said, "The result of high prices is a widening digital divide that slows progress in vital areas such as health, education and science. Yet with the advent of affordable smartphones, new undersea cables and innovations in wireless spectrum usage, there is simply no good reason for the digital divide to continue.

"The real bottleneck now is anti-competitive policies that keep prices unaffordable. The Alliance is about removing that barrier and helping as many as possible get online at reasonable cost."

Justice Greening, secretary of state for International Development added that the new alliance will move to stop anti-competitive regulations and policies from driving up the prices of broadband in poorer countries.

She said, "Over the last twenty years the web has changed our own society so much that everyday life seems unimaginable without it. Internet access has been a driver of economic growth. It puts power in the hands of people and opens up societies. Yet for millions of people across the world high prices still put it out of reach."

As well as Google and Facebook, the Alliance for Affordable Internet also has the support of companies including Intel, Microsoft and Yahoo. ?

Source: http://feeds.theinquirer.net/c/554/f/434568/s/32289dea/sc/46/l/0L0Stheinquirer0Bnet0Cinquirer0Cnews0C2299110A0Cuk0Egovernment0Eteams0Ewith0Egoogle0Eand0Efacebook0Eto0Ebring0Einternet0Eto0Eall/story01.htm

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AP IMPACT: Tribes mishandle funds, go unpunished

(AP) ? American Indian tribes have been caught misappropriating tens of millions of taxpayer dollars, according to internal tribal audits and other documents. But federal authorities do little about it ? due to a lack of oversight, resources or political will.

The result? Poor tribes like the Northern Arapaho of Wyoming suffer.

One Arapaho manager pocketed money meant to buy meals for tribal elders. Another used funds from the reservation's diabetes program to subsidize personal shopping trips. And other members plundered the tribal welfare fund, then gambled the money away at one of the tribe's casinos.

Altogether, employees drained at least a half-million dollars from the coffers of a tribe whose members have a median household income of about $16,000 a year.

Federal agencies questioned millions more dollars the Northern Arapaho government spent, but decided not to recover any of the money ? and even increased funding to the tribe.

The Wyoming tribe is hardly unique.

An Associated Press review of summaries of audits shows that serious concerns were consistently raised about 124 of 551 tribal governments, schools or housing authorities that received at least 10 years of substantial federal funds since 1997.

Fraud and theft occur across the range of nonprofits and local governments that get federal money. But tribes are five times as likely as other recipients of federal funds to have "material weaknesses" that create an opportunity for abuses, according to the review. Overall, one in four audits concluded that tribal governments, schools or housing authorities had a material weakness in their federally funded programs; the rate was one in 20 for nontribal programs.

Thousands of pages of audits and dozens of reports by federal investigators, obtained by the AP under the Freedom of Information Act, show evidence of embezzlement, paychecks for do-nothing jobs, and employees who over-billed hours and expenses. The audits, conducted by private firms, are required of tribes that spend more than $500,000 in federal funds annually.

Agencies often cannot legally cut funding because of treaties, Supreme Court decisions and acts of Congress, and frequently refuse to take control of failing programs.

"It's basically a reluctance to take on tribes. The Department of the Interior bends over backwards to be their friends," said Earl Devaney, the former inspector general at the department that houses the bureaus of Indian Affairs and Indian Education. "It's 'make nice,' and what you don't know, you don't know."

Many amounts were relatively small. But there are so many instances of abuses that the total was substantial.

Tribal council members in Northern California used federal grants to pay their utility bills and mortgages. A Nebraska tribe spent health clinic money on horses and ATVs. An environmental supervisor with a Washington tribe received $16,000 for mileage and other charges he either exaggerated or never incurred. Among grant programs with a significant track record in a government database of audits, tribes ran 16 of the 20 with the highest rates of rule-breaking. Auditors flagged welfare grants to tribes, for example, 39 percent of the time. Most prominent were programs funded by Interior's bureaus of Indian Affairs and Indian Education and the Indian Health Service, under the Department of Health and Human Services.

Many findings by auditors suggest mismanagement, not theft or fraud.

One barrier to proper administration of tribal programs is turnover among staff and leaders ? entire governments can be voted out of office every two years. Attracting qualified administrators to often-remote reservations in the first place is another challenge. "So they hire maybe the chairman's nephew who had some accounting classes," said Pete Magee, a longtime auditor of tribal books.

Sergio Maldonado, a Northern Arapaho member who is diversity coordinator at Central Wyoming College in Riverton, said tribes generally are just finding their self-governance footing after years of being under federal control. He said there are four goals for a successful tribal government ? "academic preparation, professional experience, a collective consensus for the benefit of the tribe and an ethical set of guidelines."

Maldonado, who also teaches a class about the tribe on the reservation, said it is relatively easy to address each point individually. But all four must be done together, and that's not easy, he added. "It's not just our reservation; this is commonplace with a lot of tribes."

___

There are about 10,000 enrolled members of the Northern Arapaho, which shares a large reservation southeast of Grand Teton National Park. For the most part, they live in trailers, lapped siding homes and farm houses scratched into the high plains at the foot of the Wind River Mountain Range.

Officials at the Northern Arapaho Business Council, which governs the tribe, contended in a statement that numerous negative audits the tribe received were "primarily a result of inadequate documentation and record-keeping." The statement added that the management issues "were many years in the making and will take time and considerable financial resources to fix."

The business council has ordered a "top to bottom review of all programs, both tribal and federal, to determine if improper spending is taking place and if personnel changes are required."

Gary Collins, a former chairman of the business council who serves as the Northern Arapaho liaison with the state, said the tribe participates in more than 60 federal programs, a number that presents challenges for auditing and accountability. "There's nothing really intentional," he said of any shortcomings.

Since the early 1970s, federal policy has favored letting tribes manage housing, health, welfare, law enforcement and other programs as they see fit. As this "self-determination" approach took hold, many tribes developed the financial savvy and governmental infrastructure to handle millions in federal money without major incident. But others, like the Northern Arapaho, have not.

Federal officials try to coach tribes to self-correct rather than punish them ? both in deference to tribal "self-determination" and because there aren't enough staff to closely monitor the thousands of service contracts between tribes and the government.

Even when auditors raise concerns, there is no guarantee that tribal leaders will be investigated or prosecuted. Several auditors said their contracts were not renewed after they uncovered self-enrichment by tribal leaders.

Indeed, agencies recoup a small fraction of what they conclude tribes owe.

Since fiscal year 2008, the BIA and the Bureau of Indian Education have collected only $2.3 million of nearly $69 million in questionable expenditures, according to financial records. In several cases, the bureaus were legally barred from recouping money because they waited too long.

Since 2003, auditors concluded that 79 tribes or Indian organizations couldn't justify $33 million of Environmental Protection Agency money they spent. EPA said it had recouped "approximately $3 million" since October 2007.

Indian Affairs and Indian Education can't legally reduce funding even to corrupt governments. Funding levels are set by federal law, regardless of how well a tribe is managed.

Thomas Thompson, a senior budget official at Indian Affairs, said reducing funding based on past practices would penalize tribal members rather than address management issues. The standard punishment is requiring tribes to submit invoices for reimbursement, rather than giving full funding at the start of each year.

Agencies can in theory wrest programs back from tribes, but almost never do. In 2012, for example, Indian Affairs had taken back the programs of three of 566 federally recognized tribes. "They don't want to take the program back;" said Brian Pogue, a BIA employee for 30 years who retired as its director. "They want the tribe to succeed."

___

Pritchard reported from Los Angeles. Interactive Newsroom Technology Editor Troy Thibodeaux in New Orleans and researcher Susan James in New York contributed to this story.

Follow Justin Pritchard at https://twitter.com/lalanewsman.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-07-US-Tribal-Troubles-Abridged/id-0da4f71593944fc69ca9a557531f8645

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Diverse crowd, 2,000 strong, seeks immigration reform (Star Tribune)

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DOD recall, back-pay bill mark Day 5 of shutdown

Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, arrives at the Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. The Republican-controlled House and the Democrat-controlled Senate are at an impasse, neither side backing down, after House GOP conservatives linked the funding bill to President Obama's existent health care law. There has been no sign of progress toward ending the government shutdown that has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, arrives at the Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. The Republican-controlled House and the Democrat-controlled Senate are at an impasse, neither side backing down, after House GOP conservatives linked the funding bill to President Obama's existent health care law. There has been no sign of progress toward ending the government shutdown that has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Democratic leaders discuss the government shutdown and their disagreement with Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, at a news conference at the Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. There has been no sign of progress toward ending an impasse that has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. From left to right are Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md., House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, walks to the chamber as lawmakers vote to pay federal workers who have been furloughed during the government shutdown, at the Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. The Republican-controlled House and the Democrat-controlled Senate remain at an impasse, neither side backing down, since House GOP conservatives linked the funding bill to President Obama's signature health care law. The shutdown has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and House Democratic leaders discuss the government shutdown and their disagreement with Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, at a news conference at the Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. House Republicans appeared to be shifting their demands Saturday, de-emphasizing their previous insistence on defunding the health care overhaul in exchange for re-opening the government. Instead, they ramped up calls for cuts in federal benefit programs and future deficits, items that Boehner has said repeatedly will be part of any talks on debt limit legislation. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., center, and members of the Republican Caucus, speak with reporters just after the House voted for back pay for government workers, who have been furloughed during the government shutdown at the Capitol in Washington Saturday, Oct. 5, 2013. From left are Rep. James Lankford, R-Okla., Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., and Rep. Lynn Jenkins, R-Kan. There has been no sign of progress towards ending an impasse that has idled 800,000 federal workers and curbed services around the country. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

WASHINGTON (AP) ? For days lawmakers have debated which federal workers should be put back to work. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel ended the argument Saturday for most Pentagon civilian employees, ordering nearly all 350,000 back on the job.

That's a large chunk of the estimated 800,000 federal workers on furlough because of the partial government shutdown. All those in the government off the job or working without paychecks would benefit from a bill the House approved Saturday without dissent that orders them to be paid once the shutdown ends.

The back-pay bill and Hagel's decision, based on a bill supported by Republicans and Democrats and signed into law by President Barack Obama, would appear to take a big bite out of the impact of the political impasse that has left the government without a budget. With an unprecedented default on the federal debt in less than two weeks, key members of both parties concede that no one has presented a plausible plan for avoiding it.

Hagel said he based his decision on a Pentagon interpretation of a law called the Pay Our Military Act, which was passed shortly before the partial government shutdown began last Tuesday. Republican lawmakers had complained in recent days that the Obama administration was slow to bring back those workers even though the law allowed it.

In a written statement explaining his action, Hagel said the Justice Department advised that the law does not permit a blanket recall of all Pentagon civilians. But government attorneys concluded that the law does allow the Pentagon to eliminate furloughs for "employees whose responsibilities contribute to the morale, well-being, capabilities and readiness of service members."

Hagel said he has told Pentagon officials, including leaders of the military services, to "identify all employees whose activities fall under these categories." He said civilian workers should stand by for further word this weekend.

In remarks to reporters, Robert Hale, the Pentagon's budget chief, said he did not yet know the exact number of civilians who would be brought back to work but that it would be "90 percent plus." He said there are about 350,000 civilians on furlough, somewhat fewer than the 400,000 that officials had previously indicated. If 90 percent were recalled that would mean 315,000 coming off furlough.

Hale said that even with this relief, the effect of the furloughs has been severe.

"We've seriously harmed civilian morale; this (recall) will be a start back," he said.

Hale said he hoped that a "substantial number" could be returned to work on Monday but that an exact timetable was not available.

On Capitol Hill, Republicans and Democrats continued to bicker and to ponder the chasm between their warring parties, each of which seems convinced it's on the winning side morally and politically. House Speaker John Boehner, asked Saturday whether Congress was any closer to resolving the impasse, replied: "No." Aides say he has not figured out how to end the gridlock.

Even the top bipartisan achievement of the shutdown's fifth day ? agreeing to pay furloughed federal employees for the work days they are missing ? was a thin victory. Congress made the same deal after the mid-1990s shutdowns, and Saturday's 407-0 vote was widely expected.

Still, it triggered the sort of derisive quarreling that has prevented Congress from resolving the larger funding and debt dilemmas.

"Of all the bizarre moments" involved in the debate, said Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, "this may be the most bizarre: that we will pay people not to work." He called it "the new tea party sense of fiscal responsibility."

House Republicans said they want to ease the pain from the partial shutdown. Democrats said Congress should fully re-open the government and let employees work for the pay they're going to receive.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Saturday the Democratic-controlled Senate will approve retroactive pay for furloughed workers, although he didn't specify when.

The politics of the shutdown have merged with partisan wrangling over the graver issue of raising the federal debt limit by Oct. 17. If that doesn't happen, the White House says, the government will be unable to pay all its bills, including interest on debt. Economists say a U.S. default would stun world markets and likely send this nation, and possibly others, into recession.

Boehner, R-Ohio, and Obama say they abhor the idea of a default. But they and their respective parties have not budged from positions that bar a solution.

Obama says he will not negotiate tax and spending issues if they are linked to a debt-ceiling hike. Boehner and his GOP allies say they will not raise the ceiling unless Democrats agree to deep spending cuts.

Many House Republicans also demand curbs to Obama's signature health care law as a condition of reopening the government. The president and his allies call the demand absurd.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-05-Budget%20Battle/id-73b875c6654944d18ca65a7e23cd45b3

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Sunday, October 6, 2013

#Ford Mustang Cobra Jet Prototype Sells at Barrett-Jackson Auction! Read more he...

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Video | Happy Friday! + EXO's 'Growl' a Blue Print for Nigeria's Music ...

Happy Friday folks!

It?s coming quite late but my October and November is rather intimidating i.e. it is packed with upcoming conferences, speaking engagements, travels, work and a lot more that is better left unsaid, for now. I do look forward to spending sometime with you all this weekend so do enjoy your weekend but be sure to check in. icon smile Video | Happy Friday! + EXOs Growl a Blue Print for Nigerias Music Industry, Perhaps?

I was thinking about Nigeria?s music industry, as I often do. I found myself doing a lot of comparison with South Korea?s. The South Korean music industry has its own fair share of issues. ?They range from the way artists, especially minors, are captured at a young age and treated, including terrible recording contracts and minimal compensation, at best, for the extremely hard work they put into their careers, among other things. Despite these issues, there is something Nigeria?s music industry and its professionals can learn form the South Koreans. I don?t know why Nigerians keep looking to the US as the blue print for its entertainment industries when there are more parallels with Bollywood and South Korea?s industries.

In any event, some things we can emulate is the immense discipline artists bring to their craft. From vocals, to dance , personal branding and much more, they do it all. The labels also know how to truly run successful labels and focus on making marketing and promotions an art form. The South Koreans have successfully promoted their brand of music across Asia. They are now taking over Europe and judging by how successful Psy?s Gangam style was, we can rest assured that the door has just opened for Koreans to truly seize the opportunity in the States. I could go on but there will be more opportunities to discuss these similarities in the future.

For now, let me leave you all with the boy band Exo?s ?growl.? Folks, this group is made up of 12 young men and guess what, THEY HARMONIZE, they dance and they are just packaged right. In Nigeria, we can?t get our artists to all be on the same page like this. Plus, if one is successful, the next thing you know, we will not hear word.

Also, their videos are very creative. We in Nigeria and the Nigerian diaspora are not quite there yet. Finally, we tend to sing rubbish lyrics. The Koreans have perfected the art of story telling. They cater their music to their cultural norms.

Take ?Growl? for example by Exo. The way these fellas spin words together about the woman they desire is so beautiful yet powerful and effective and sells. We must strive harder and look to those who do it so well for the kind of blue print we should aim to achieve in our industry.

Have a great weekend and I will see you all, virtually speaking, soon.

Cheers,
Uduak

Even America?s Billboard is giving this group face time and regularly features South Korean artists. We need to get on this page.

?I?m warning you just in case (listen carefully)
It?s dangerous now (so dangerous)
Stop provoking me (there?s going to be trouble)
I don?t even know myself

My breath keeps on stopping
You walk towards me
You smile at me
Maybe you?re attracted to me too

My sights become dark
When you stare at me
The sound of your breathing
You?re the one that makes me crazy

So nobody can look at you (when you smile)
I want to hide you inside my embrace (I?m so serious)
The stares that are after you
Wakes up inside me
There?s a harsh/fierce swirl/storm

A dark shadow has woken up inside of me
Sparks fly in my eyes as I look at you
Everyone step away from her (step away)
It?s going to get fierce from now on
I?m growling, growling, growling
I?m growling, growling, growling
I?m growling, growling, growling
If you don?t back away then I don?t care if you get hurt. . .?

Lyrics by @kpoplyrics_net on Twitter | kpoplyricsnet on Facebook

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Source: http://africamusiclaw.com/2013/10/video-happy-friday-exos-growl-a-blue-print-for-nigerias-music-industry-perhaps.html

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Samsung Galaxy S4 (Verizon Wireless)


Nearly half a year after its initial release, the Samsung Galaxy S4 ($199.99/16GB with 2-year contract) remains a top option on every carrier it's available on. The blinding number of features and impressive performance keep the S4 at the front of the pack. The S4 is our favorite Android handset on Verizon, despite solid efforts by the LG G2?and Motorola Moto X. The Apple iPhone 5s, meanwhile, shares our Editors' Choice for its forward-looking features and unbeatable array of apps.

We've already reviewed the Galaxy S4 on a number of different carriers, so we won't get into all the details of this do-it-all Android phone. See our original T-Mobile Galaxy S4?review to get the full run down on its extensive set of features.

Performance, Call Quality, and Bloatware
Aside from carrier logos, Verizon's S4 is more or less identical to T-Mobile's version inside and out. And performance is the same thanks to the 1.9GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor. This model supports CDMA on 850/1900/2100MHz bands, 750/1700MHz LTE, and 850/900/1800/1900MHz GSM. Verizon had the best nationwide LTE coverage in our Fastest Mobile Networks?survey, but the fastest speeds belong to AT&T. Reception was excellent during our tests in New York City, as the S4 was even able to maintain a connection in our office basement, where signals are typically weak.

Note: The slideshow below is of the T-Mobile Galaxy S4, which is physically identical to the Verizon S4.

The Galaxy S4 sets the bar for call quality. Beyond the sound profile personalization, you have the ability to toggle noise cancellation and jack up the volume in noisy situations. There's no HD Voice like you get with Sprint or Wi-Fi calling like you get with T-Mobile. Voices come through clearly in the earpiece and calls made on the phone sound superb. Like all S4's, you can tweak the sound profile to suit your personal preferences, making it one of the best phones for call quality. In our tests, the Verizon S4 lasted for 10 hours, 53 minutes of continuous talk time, which is on par with other carrier models we've seen.

Of the 16GB internal storage, only 8.67GB is available to users out of the box. Verizon went a bit overboard with the pre-loads on its S4. There are seven Verizon branded apps, ranging from the useful Visual Voicemail app to the useless Verizon Tones app, and nine third-party apps. None of these can be uninstalled, which is a big letdown considering carriers like Sprint at least let you remove some of the bloat. There's a microSD card slot under the back cover that worked fine with our 32 and 64GB SanDisk cards.

Pricing and Conclusions
You can get the 16GB S4 on Verizon for $199.99 with a two-year contract, which is the same price as the LG G2, HTC One, and iPhone 5s. With it come your standard Verizon options for voice, text, and data plans, which tend to be on the expensive side compared with other carriers. Plans start at $40/month for unlimited talk and text, but data must be bought separately on via Shareable Data plans. Those start at 500MB/$40, with 2GB/$60 in the middle, and top out at $80 for 6GB. AT&T plans are a bit more complicated, but one smartphone and 2GB of data will add up to $90 per month versus the $100 per month Verizon charges.

We give a slight edge to the S4 over both the HTC One and LG G2, both of which are fine phones in their own right. The One will appeal to users who put a premium on design, while the G2 is the first device to feature Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon 800 processor and might appeal to those who want the latest tech in their pockets. Still, the dizzying array of features, superb call quality, and excellent performance keep the S4 at the top of the pack, even half a year after its release. For those looking for a more refined device and the best selection of apps, the iPhone 5s is an excellent choice that shows some real potential with its forward-looking features.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/VD6pykDKq80/0,2817,2425024,00.asp

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Lack of monthly U.S. jobs report leaves economic void - Fri, 04 Oct 2013 PST

WASHINGTON ? The latest victims of the government?s partial shutdown: policy wonks, politicians and TV talking heads who are losing their monthly opportunity to dissect the jobs report issued by the Bureau of Labor?Statistics.

The ritual unfolds every month: The jobs report comes out, and Wall Street panics or exults. Political advocates spin. And economic analysts crowd cable TV to offer us their?insights.

It happens the first Friday of the month at 8:30 a.m. Eastern?time.

Except?today.

The government?s partial shutdown means the September jobs report is being postponed. The workers who produce it??


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WASHINGTON ? The latest victims of the government?s partial shutdown: policy wonks, politicians and TV talking heads who are losing their monthly opportunity to dissect the jobs report issued by the Bureau of Labor?Statistics.

The ritual unfolds every month: The jobs report comes out, and Wall Street panics or exults. Political advocates spin. And economic analysts crowd cable TV to offer us their?insights.

It happens the first Friday of the month at 8:30 a.m. Eastern?time.

Except?today.

The government?s partial shutdown means the September jobs report is being postponed. The workers who produce it aren?t deemed ?essential,? which is why they?re among the 800,000 federal employees being?furloughed.

They aren?t doctors treating wounded soldiers at military hospitals or air traffic controllers ensuring that planes take off and land?safely.

They?re?statisticians.

Yet for a subculture of Americans whose professional lives are tied to the monthly jobs report, its absence may be?disorienting.

?Economists and journalists will have some withdrawal pains,? suggests Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody?s Analytics and a fixture on cable-TV gabfests after the jobs reports are?released.

Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial and another regular television presence on the morning of the jobs reports, jokes that she won?t have to get up so early today. Yet she?ll feel the?loss.

The jobs report is a ?flashlight into the dense forest of global economic information,? Swonk said. ?We?ve turned the flashlight?off.?

Wall Street traders whose computers are normally primed to spring into action milliseconds after the report is issued will have to manage without?it.

?Most investors I talk to are taking a wait-and-see attitude,? said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank. ?I don?t think anybody is crying in their?beer.?

Wall Street bases its buy-and-sell decisions on countless data ? from economic growth in the United States and abroad to corporate profits, manufacturing output and home sales. But the jobs report tends to occupy center stage. Job growth drives consumer spending, which fuels most of the U.S.?economy.

?The economic data everybody looks at all month long leads up to a day like (today),? said Jonathan D. Corpina, senior managing partner at Meridian Equity Partners. ?Without having that core ingredient to your economic calendar, the dish really isn?t going to be?done.?

So can stock analysts just take today?off?

Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors in Holland, Pa., mused, half-seriously, that he might as well head to his weekend place on the Jersey?shore.

?Employment Fridays are always an incredibly busy time for me,? Naroff said. ?This one is going to be strangely?quiet.?

What will the cable financial news outlets, from CNBC to Bloomberg to Fox Business Network, do this morning with no jobs?report?

CNBC issued a statement saying it?s ?still planning a big show on Friday? focused on the uncertainty from the shutdown and the ?incomplete picture on where the jobs market currently?stands.?

Today?s report was expected to show that the economy added 180,000 jobs in September, slightly more than the modest 169,000 in August. The unemployment rate was expected to remain at a still-high 7.3?percent.

Without the jobs data, it isn?t only Wall Street that will have to act without its usual information. The Federal Reserve will almost surely put off any move to slow its bond purchases when it meets later this month. The purchases have been designed to keep long-term borrowing rates?low.

A resolution of the shutdown would allow the government to eventually release the September jobs report. But Naroff is already worried about the October jobs report, set for release in early November. A prolonged shutdown would bar the government from doing the necessary surveys on hiring and?employment.

?Do they do it a week late?? Naroff said. ?Do they just not do it? I don?t?know.?

Zandi says he?ll grow alarmed only if a prolonged shutdown shuts off the flow of economic data for weeks. No one would know precisely how the economy is reacting to Washington?s political?standoff.

?It?s like flying a plane with few instruments,? Zandi says. ?You?re able to do it for a while. But if you hit a storm, there?s a good chance you?ll?crash.?

Still, important as the jobs report is, some find its coverage on cable TV to be overkill. Barry Ritholtz, chief investment officer at Ritholtz Wealth Management, calls it ?the single most overanalyzed, overwrought, overemphasized data point in?finance.?

Ritholtz notes that each month?s job figure is later revised twice, sometimes?sharply.

?It?s only a function of financial television and radio that have time to?fill.?

Regardless, Zandi plans to be exactly where he is on every other first Friday of the month: speaking on a panel of experts on?CNBC.

?There?s always something to talk about,? he?said.

? Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2013/oct/04/lack-of-monthly-us-jobs-report-leaves-economic/

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Saturday, October 5, 2013

annonces: Self help and anger management

Self Help And Anger Management

People that get angered easily may need some effective means to control themselves and may thus need to look for a proper anger management technique that will answer to their needs to control them in situations that often gets well out of hand. With people having serious instances of anger management requirements the good news is that a number of different techniques with regard to self help anger management are available to fight off this condition.

Counseling From Therap...

self help,self improvement,anger management

People that get angered easily may need some effective means to control themselves and may thus need to look for a proper anger management technique that will answer to their needs to control them in situations that often gets well out of hand. With people having serious instances of anger management requirements the good news is that a number of different techniques with regard to self help anger management are available to fight off this condition.

Counseling From Therapists - Among the many self help anger management techniques available is the one that requires taking counseling from therapists, and there are also very many books written on the subject to enable a person to utilize the knowledge gained by reading such literature on the subject and create their own self help anger management techniques that will work well for them.

There is also anger management courses which is a means very often used by people that wish to get more in-depth help from experts regarding controlling their anger, and it also affords those suffering from anger to interact with fellow sufferers and thus can gain valuable insights as to how self help will make them overcome such problems and so should incorporate such techniques in order to bring their anger under control. Self help also means the sufferer is able to avail of support as well as understanding from others, and in this regard family members are the persons the sufferer must need to turn to when requiring the necessary understanding and support and once given, also helps ensure that the situation is not further aggravated.

Also, anger management problems are not just confined to adults; but, can affect children as well and it is not uncommon for children that behave well to also be affected by anger that was not evident earlier. It is up to the parents to provide the child with proper guidance and should expend their energies to help in contributing to the child learning self help anger management techniques and so, overcome the behavioral problems.

It is also common for sufferers to find self help from other resources besides their parents, and taking to performing yoga as well as meditation is just one instance of how a self help anger management technique can help overcome the problem. Other methods for self help include reading up books as well as listening to audio books on the subject, and with a few more available alternatives, it is possible for the sufferer to find an ideal method of self help to help get rid of the problem of anger.

?


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BASEBALL UPDATE: BIG START for the Tigers in Oakland. They lead 3-0 heading to t...

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Friday, October 4, 2013

California high school forces girl to remove ?violent? NRA t-shirt, apologizes

School officials at Canyon High School in Anaheim, Calif. forced a student to change out of a t-shirt promoting the National Rifle Association.

The incident happened in September, reports CBS Los Angeles. A security guard at Canyon High ? ?Home of the Comanches? ? tapped sophomore Haley Bullwinkle on the shoulder and marched her directly to the principal?s office.

Bullwinkle, 16, said school officials then commanded her to remove the shirt immediately and put on something else.

?They were treating me like I was a criminal,? Bullwinkle told the station.

According to the sophomore, they also told her that the NRA shirt ?promoted gun violence.

The images on the shirt are a male deer, an American flag and the silhouette of a hunter in a field. Below those images are the words ?Protecting America?s Traditions Since 1871.?

The shirt was a gift from the girl?s father, an NRA member received it when he joined the civil rights organization.

According to CBS Los Angeles, the high school?s ambiguous dress code prohibits ?offensive, violent or divisive clothing.?

Bullwinkle?s unnamed father emailed Kimberly Fricker, the principal at Canyon High, seeking further explanation concerning how the school defines ?violent? clothing.

In response, Fricker blamed ?school police.?

?The shirt had a gun on it, which is not allowed by school police,? the principal wrote. ?It?s protocol to have students change when they?re in violation of the dress code.?

The girl?s father noted that Canyon High?s mascot is the Comanche.

?I think that if you consider the hunter ? the image of the hunter to be offensive ? certainly there are groups that would consider the Comanche Indian chief to be offensive,? he said.

He also observed that Canyon High?s drill team twirls fake rifles, according to CBS Los Angeles.

After CBS Los Angeles reported on story, school officials quickly caved.?On Thursday, school officials apologized to changed course and apologized to Bullwinkle and promised to train security guards and other staffers?so that ?an incident like this does not occur again,? reports the Los Angeles Times.

The incident appears similar to an April 2013 incident that occurred in Logan County, West Va. involving a then-eighth-grader, Jared Marcum, who was suspended and, astonishingly, arrested after he refused to remove an NRA t-shirt which depicted a hunting rifle with the statement ?protect your right.?

In a move The Daily Caller can only characterize as courageous, Marcum, 14, returned to Logan Middle School after his suspension wearing exactly the same shirt. (RELATED: Eighth-grader arrested over NRA shirt returns to school in same shirt)

Local prosecutors pursued a criminal case against the eighth-grader. Eventually, 70 days after the incident occurred, prosecutors withdrew a criminal charge of obstructing an officer against the 14-year-old boy. (RELATED: Charges finally dropped against eighth-grader who wore NRA shirt to school)

Follow Eric on Twitter?and send education-related story tips to?erico@dailycaller.com.

Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/10/04/california-high-school-forces-girl-to-remove-violent-nra-t-shirt-apologizes/

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