Showing posts with label in. Show all posts
Showing posts with label in. Show all posts

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ohio Unemployment numbers drop

Unemployment numbers drop in Ohio


There’s a bit of good news on Ohio’s unemployment front. New numbers, just released, show that the official jobless rate in December was 9.6 percent. That’s down from November’s rate of 9.8 percent.

It’s just the latest evidence of a recent downward trend, according to Ben Johnson at the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services. He was interviewed by statehouse correspondent Bill Cohen.

Click to listen



Johnson tracks Ohio unemployment numbers at the Department of Job and Family Services. Its latest report shows that 13,000 Ohioans got off the unemployment rolls in December. But they leave behind 567,000 people who are still without a job.

News From: www.wksu.org

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Gay marriage in U.S. states

Gay marriage could move forward in some U.S. states

(Reuters) - A handful of U.S. states are poised to take up the issue of gay marriage afresh, due largely to incoming lawmakers who may tip the balance in favor of the controversial measure.

In Maryland, New York and Rhode Island in particular, the legalization of same-sex marriages is moving ahead, organizers and supporters say.

"We have the numbers," said Maryland state Sen. Richard Madaleno Jr. "We've never been in a better position."

The November 2010 election brought a "significant shift," especially in the Senate, said Madaleno, one of Maryland's seven openly gay legislators, three of whom are newly elected.

Even more important, Maryland's Senate Judicial Proceedings committee, which has prevented gay marriage bills from reaching a floor vote, has several new, sympathetic members, said Morgan Meneses-Sheets of Equality Maryland, an advocacy group.

Majority leaders of both houses plan to co-sponsor gay marriage measures. Gov. Martin O'Malley, whose opponent was against gay marriage, has pledged to sign such a bill,

Nationwide, after the Congressional vote to repeal the "Don't ask, don't tell" policy which expelled thousands of gay people from the U.S. military, gay rights advocates are pushing ahead on marriage.

"The work of persuasion, of personal conversations, of talking to lawmakers and mobilizing against a well-funded anti-gay opposition" are among the primary tasks for the lobbying group Freedom to Marry, said founder Evan Wolfson.

"With the freedom to marry within reach this year in states such as New York, Maryland and Rhode Island, now is the time to have those conversations and move marriage forward," he said.

Nearly half of the states have amended their constitutions, however, to prohibit marriage between same-sex partners or defining marriage as the union of one man and one woman, rendering gay marriage beyond reach any time soon.

In New York, where newly-inaugurated Gov. Andrew Cuomo strongly supports gay marriage, lawmakers remain divided but advocates say the prospects are improved with the popular governor's backing.

"Its chances only get better," said Democratic Sen. Thomas Duane, the state's only openly gay senator, who has said he would introduce a gay marriage bill and push for a vote by summer. "Public support grows every time the issue is debated."

Although not a supporter, Dean Skelos, leader of the majority Republicans in the Senate, has said he would not block such a bill coming to the Senate floor for a vote so legislators can make their positions known, according to rights group Empire State Pride Agenda.

Put to a so-called conscience vote, gay marriage has a better chance this year than it did in 2009, said Democratic Sen. Malcolm Smith of New York City, when the Assembly approved it but the Senate did not.

"It is premature to make predictions or attempt head counts based solely on prior votes, but there is reason to be confident," said Ross Levi of Empire State Pride Agenda.

News From: www.reuters.com

Monster Jam in San Diego 2011History

The Largest Monster Jam in San Diego History!


Qualcomm is playing host and tickets are going fast! Megan Tevrizian gets a sneak peak with driver Jim Koehler.

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News From: www.americanconsumernews.com

Otalgia Difficult to Diagnose In Kids

Otalgia Difficult to Diagnose In Kids

Otalgia, or earache, can be difficult to diagnose in children. A study published in Journal of Pain points to a parents’ assessment of earache pain, or acute oritis media (AOM), being potentially unreliable.

“In preverbal children, who constitute the majority of children with AOM, it is not clear how parents determine whether their child is having otalgia,” said Nader Shaikh, MD, MPH, from the Division of General Academic Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in Pennsylvania. “Specifically, it is unclear which of the symptoms of AOM impacts parental pain assessment the most.”

The study sought to determine how parents of preverbal children decide they’re suffering from otalgia. Their findings suggested that instead of looking at the common symptoms of AOM, the interpretation of symptoms appeared to be influenced by the parents’ socioeconomic status.

The level of pain experienced by the child cannot be properly assessed without taking into account the mother’s education background, and insurance status. The study authors ultimately concluded the amount of pain parents see in their children is influenced by biological, psychological and social factors, with observable behaviors only accounting for 50 percent of pain levels.

News From: www.thirdage.com

Watch Facebook Co-Founder Eduardo Saverin Invest Qwiki video

Facebook Co-Founder Eduardo Saverin Invests In Qwiki


Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin and YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim are among the investors financing an $8 million round of funding for Qwiki, a startup that aims to, in its own words, "forever improve the way people experience information."

Saverin, who is the lead investor in the startup's latest round of financing, has kept a low profile in recent years, but his role in the founding of the world's largest social network was brought to the fore by the movie The Social Network, which pitted the entrepreneur against Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

"I am in a situation today where I can do what I love, which is help other entrepreneurs," Saverin told the New York Times. "Facebook has been a big thing and will be a big thing. Qwiki is early stage, but they are on the path to be a game changer."

Doug Imbruce, Qwiki's CEO, and Dr. Louis Monier, founder of AltaVista, are the co-founders of Qwiki, which received an award at the 2010 TechCrunch Disrupt conference. The startup provides what it calls an "information experience" that compiles data about a topic into a multimedia presentation. Imbruce describes Qwiki's service as capable of bringing an "information nirvana" to life by packaging content in a way that brings rich media together in a more human and organic way.

Imbruce told The Huffington Post that Saverin reached out to the startup after seeing Qwiki's presentation at TechCrunch Disrupt, then the three "sat down in New York over drinks," where they connected over their belief that Qwiki has the potential to change the Web much as the social graph, pioneered by Facebook, has over the past several years.

"Eduardo is a visionary investor," Imbruce said. "He shares the Qwiki vision and wants to make another big impact."

The company hopes to entice third-party content creators, from real estate agents to bloggers, to used Qwicki to put together interactive presentations.

Noting that the startup received considerable interest from acquirers, publishers, and VCs following its debut at Disrupt, Imbruce explained that the co-founders structured their funding to allow them to maintain full control of the company.

"We're not here to flip Qwiki," Imbruce explained. "Our capital structure allows us to stay in control while having support of highly motivated partners like Eduardo, people who've changed the world before."

"Qwiki is a game changer," said Karim in a statement. "The team has succeeded in creating an entirely new media format that will drastically improve the web experience."



Watch video:

Crybaby Cutler Hopes rest

Hopes rest in crybaby Cutler

Hey, Jay Cutler: Turn that frown upside down. You’re playing in the NFC Championship Game!

Many might hate Jay Cutler for being, well, a jerk.
Dubbed a cry baby in Denver when Josh McDaniels was hired, Cutler got his way and was part of a three-team trade two years ago and found himself in the Windy City.

We know the story. If you’re a Bronco fan, you hate him now. If you’re a Bears fan, you hated him last year, but now his ornery, pretty-boy look is growing on you.

But if you’re a fan of an AFC West or NFC north team, you thrive in a Cutler-prone three-interception performance of years past.
Well, now is the new-and-more-improved Cutler. This is the NFC-Championship-Game Cutler.

He looked stellar in 2010 and helped Chicago beat out the Packers and Vikings for the NFC North crown.

Now on the verge of being in the Super Bowl, Cutler is faced with the biggest task and maybe the biggest game of his career so far.
He told USA Today on Thursday that the 182nd meeting between the Green Bay Packers and Chicago Bears — the NFL’s oldest rivalry — could be Chicago’s game of the year.

“It’s almost like a mini-Super Bowl,” Cutler said. “I know Chicago will be really disappointed if we don’t win this game.”
Maybe the people from Chicago, the state of Illinois and Bears fans all over the world can take a second Super Bowl loss in the last four years.

But losing to Green Bay for the right to play in the Super Bowl and maybe having to watch the Packers win the Super Bowl is unacceptable.

I couldn’t handle Philadelphia or Dallas beating the New York Giants in the playoffs, advancing to the Super Bowl and walking away with the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

As a fan, I’ve recently been on both sides of that. The Giants defeated the Cowboys in the 2007 NFC Divisional round and eventually went on to win their third Super Bowl title.
The following year as the No.1 seed in the NFC, the Plaxico Burress-less G-Men were embarrassed in the Meadowlands by the Eagles.

Thanks goodness for Larry Fitzgerald and Kurt Warner. The Eagles were shocked the next week by the Arizona Cardinals in the 2008 NFC title game.
But something I thought Cutler would do is maybe take a war of words with the media in regards to Sunday’s tussle with the Packers.

He hasn’t.

Cutler has been humbled for where he is this season and looks forward to the third battle with the Packers and their up-and-coming quarterback Aaron Rodgers.

But Cutler doesn’t want to make this game to be about him and Rodgers. He wants it to be about Packers vs. Bears.

“If we both play well, then it’s going to come down to a lot of different things,” Cutler told USA Today. “If I don’t play well, and he does, we could still win. I plan on playing well, and I’m sure he does, too.”

Cutler — aside from return specialist Devon Hester — could be the X factor if the Bears plan for their third visit to the NFL’s biggest stage.

And Bears fans will probably agree with me here: For their sake and mine, the Bears offensive line better block that harassing Packers defense.

We all want the best games possible. I don’t want to see Cutler’s head bouncing off Soldier Field’s frozen gridiron.

NEWS From: www.dailylobo.com

Ann Pettway Wanted Carlina White Kidnapping

Ann Pettway Wanted In Carlina White Kidnapping



The FBI is on the hunt for a criminal a woman named Ann Pettway who is said to have kidnapped a 19-day-old baby named Carlina White over 23 years ago.

This story from CBS/AP states that the girl was abducted from a New York city hospital and was finally reunited with her family 23 years later. Pettway moved from city to city using aliases and different forms of identification in order to elude authorities.

Pettway has continued to confound authorities who admit she has not been found since going on parole in North Carolina. She was on parole until 2012 but the long arm of the law is after her for the kidnapping of White.

White’s parents gave their account of the abduction after it is reported that they took a break after admitting the girl to a hospital for a fever.

Since the abduction Carlina White was raised under the name Nejdra Nance. The FBI states no suspects but the family insists the culprit is Pettway. It was Carlina herself who solved her lifelong mystery by contacting the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Authorities are looking into whether state or federal jurisdiction applies to this case as the statute of limitations may have expired. However according to the story, there may be federal implications wherein the statue does not expire.



News From: www.mwza.com