Monday, August 5, 2013

Gov. Pat Quinn signs bills to help ex-offenders get jobs

Gov. Pat Quinn signed a series of bills Saturday he said will help ex-offenders get jobs, stay out of prison and become productive members of society.

The Chicago Democrat said the measures also will give judges and prosecutors more options for sentencing non-violent criminals. He noted more than half of Illinois inmates return to prison within three years of their release, many because they go back to committing crimes to provide for themselves or their families.

?Formerly incarcerated individuals shouldn?t face a life sentence of no job prospects and no opportunities to better themselves just because they have served time in prison,? Quinn said during a ceremony at a church on Chicago?s South Side. ?These new laws will help them get back on their feet, contribute to their communities and keep one offense from becoming a life-long barrier.?

The measures also could help Quinn gain support among progressive voters in advance of a 2014 Democratic gubernatorial primary. Former White House chief of staff Bill Daley, also a Chicago Democrat, has said he?s running against Quinn. Four Republicans have announced they?re running: state Sens. Bill Brady and Kirk Dillard, venture capitalist Bruce Rauner and state Treasurer Dan Rutherford.

The three bills signed into law Saturday were approved by the Democrat-controlled Legislature with bipartisan support.

One measure increases a tax credit for employers who hire qualified ex-offenders to $1,500 per employee. It previously was capped at $600. Employers may take the credit for up to five years. It applies to any ex-offender hired within three years of their release from prison.

Rep. Art Turner, (D-Chicago), the lead sponsor of the bill, said he?s hopeful more employers will take advantage of the credit.

?Programs like this must be part of a creative approach to reducing recidivism and addressing the larger challenges of unemployment and violence in our communities,? Turner said.

Another bill creates a ?second-chance probation? option for non-violent offenders. It allows some convictions to be cleared from a person?s record after successful completion of at least two years of probation. It was sponsored by Rep. Tom Cross (R-Oswego), the Republican leader of the Illinois House, and Sen. Linda Holmes (D-Aurora).

The other legislation ensures motions to seal or expunge a criminal record are heard in a timely manner and that court orders are delivered to the proper authorities.

Saturday?s bill signings come one day after Quinn signed legislation to add several non-violent felonies to the list of offenses for which records may sealed. The offenses include theft, retail theft, forgery, possession of burglary tools and possession with intent to manufacture or deliver a controlled substance. Previously, records were only eligible to be sealed for people convicted of prostitution or drug possession.

The measure also easily passed the Democrat-controlled Legislature, despite concerns from some critics that it would prevent employees from knowing whether they may be hiring someone with a criminal history.

The new law requires a person to wait four years from the termination of their last sentence before asking for their records to be sealed. They also would have to pass a drug test within 30 days before filing their petition to seal. If a judge grants the petition, the sealed records can no longer be seen by most potential employers or other members of the public, except by court order. Law enforcement agencies, however, still have access, and if the person is later convicted of another crime the court may order their sealed records to be unsealed.

State Sen. Kwame Raoul (D-Chicago), a chief sponsor of the bill, said the legislation will help people who have been convicted of crimes to leave behind the stigma of a criminal conviction.

?When people have served their sentences, public safety and a sense of humanity demand that we give them the opportunities they need to stay out of prison ? a genuine chance at an education, a job and a future,? Raoul said.

The lead sponsor in the Illinois House was Rep. LaShawn Ford (D-Chicago), who is under indictment for bank fraud. Those charges were filed in federal court, so the legislation would not apply to him if he is convicted. He has pleaded not guilty.

Source: http://www.suntimes.com/news/21714642-418/gov-pat-quinn-signs-bills-to-help-ex-offenders-get-jobs.html

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2013 NFL Hall Of Fame Game: Dolphins @ Cowboys, TV Listings, More

The annual Hall of Fame game in 2103 has the Dallas Cowboys against the Miami Dolphins.

It's been a long time coming. Sure, it's not real football, but it's pretty darn close. The 2013 preseason begins tonight with our own Dallas Cowboys battling the Miami Dolphins. Don't be disappointed that many of the stars won't be playing, just enjoy the fact that the Cowboys are back in uniform and hitting on an opposing team. Think back all the way to that ugly loss to the Washington Redskins that ended the 2012 season, and how you couldn't wait for this moment to arrive. Well, here it is, the Cowboys will pad up and play a little ball.

Game Date/Time
Sunday, August 4th, 8:00 p.m. (EST)

Location
Fawcett Stadium (Canton, Ohio)

Announcers
Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth

TV Schedule
NBC

Online streaming
Preseason Live from NFL.com ($$$)

Radio/Online Broadcast
Dial Global Sports
105.3 The Fan

More from Blogging The Boys:

Source: http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/2013/8/4/4586930/2013-nfl-hall-of-fame-game-dolphins-cowboys-tv-listings-radio-online-streaming

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Sex offenders awarded $1 in liability suit over N.Y. illegal 'civil commitments'

Six sex offenders got no damage awards from former New York Gov. George Pataki and other officials who had confined to mental institutions after they served their sentences. One official is liable for $1 to each, a federal jury decided in a case that tested attitudes toward social outcasts.

By Harry Bruinius,?Staff writer / August 2, 2013

Former New York Gov. George Pataki (l.) arrives for a federal court appearance in New York on July 23. A jury found Mr. Pataki and two former state officials are 'not liable' for illegally confining six sex offenders to state mental institutions after they had completed their sentences.

Richard Drew/AP

Enlarge

A federal jury this week found former New York Gov. George Pataki and two other former state officials ?not liable? for illegally confining six sex offenders to state mental institutions after they had completed their sentences.

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On one hand, Wednesday's decision was not surprising. American politics and society have long struggled with the demand to continue to keep locked up criminals who have committed the most vile crimes but who, according to law, are allowed to go free.?Yet that tendency threatens the integrity of the judicial process, with few willing to stand up for people who have done such reprehensible things, some legal experts say.

Such cases are emotionally fraught and constitute a delicate legal balance between public safety and due process, and the jury's verdict in the New York sex offenders' civil suit points to the difficulty of striking that balance.?

?It?s an ominous development,? says Robert Burt, a law professor at Yale University in New Haven, Conn. These kinds of legal efforts seek ?to turn?confinement [of sexual offenders] away from the ordinary criminal justice system, into a mental health issue, and then to offer treatment."?But the offer is a "fraud" that's not followed up on, he says.

The case centered on a 2005 Pataki administration initiative that called for the psychiatric evaluation and continued confinement of potentially dangerous prisoners slated to be released. Twenty states, including California, Florida, and Illinois, have enacted laws permitting the civil commitment of sexual offenders as of 2010. The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006 also authorizes the federal government to commit and treat federal sex offenders. But these include legal safeguards that have passed constitutional muster, including judicial review. The Pataki initiative was simply an administrative policy.

In 2006, a federal judge found the Pataki administration's Sexually Violent Predator Initiative to be unconstitutional, and those confined under civil commitments were released. The offenders in the civil suit, each convicted of horrendous sex crimes, sought $10 million in damages.

The jury found Mr. Pataki; Glenn Goord, former correctional services commissioner; and Eileen Consilvio, the former executive director of the Manhattan Psychiatric Center, the hospital where the plaintiffs were held, not liable. The jury did find the former commissioner of the State Office of Mental Health, Sharon Carpinello, liable for their involuntary confinement. It awarded the former prisoners $1 each in damages.

In his instructions to the jury, federal district Judge Jed Rakoff explained that it was ?undisputed? that the procedures of the Sexually Violent Predator Initiative violated constitutional due process. So the issue was, he said, whether this "violation of a plaintiff's rights was done intentionally, recklessly, wantonly, maliciously or the like, or was done, by contrast, in good faith."

For all but Ms. Carpinello, the jury found that they acted in good faith.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/D0GhkJh_Iuk/Sex-offenders-awarded-1-in-liability-suit-over-N.Y.-illegal-civil-commitments

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Most Irreplaceable Cincinnati Bengals Player for the 2013 NFL Season

Jake Roth-USA TODAY Sports

?

The Cincinnati Bengals?have made the playoffs for two consecutive seasons, but each time the Houston Texans have dismissed them in the Wild Card Round. 2013 brings hope of continuing that postseason streak, and the Bengals are widely regarded as?a team on the rise.

The Bengals found their quarterback of the future in the second round of the 2011 NFL Draft, and Andy Dalton?has started every game in his first two seasons. But when thinking about who is the most irreplaceable player on Cincinnati?s roster, another player who is entering his third season jumps to the head of the class.

Wide receiver A.J. Green has immediately become one of the top young stars in the NFL, catching a total of 162 passes for over 2,400 yards and 18 touchdowns over the last two seasons. He finished in the top 10 of the league in receptions (97-seventh), receiving yards (1,350-10th) and touchdowns (11-tied for fourth) last season, along with a streak of nine straight games with a touchdown (10 total), and if not for a slow finish (less than 60 receiving yards in three of the final four games) his numbers would have been even better.

The Bengals had no one else besides Green with more than 64 receptions, 737 yards?and five touchdowns last season (tight end Jermaine Gresham in all three cases) and other than Andrew Hawkins (51 receptions) no other wide receiver had more than 20 catches. Injuries to Mohamed Sanu and Marvin Jones depleted an already thin receiving corp at different points in the season,?which served to make Dalton even more reliant on Green.

Cincinnati did add some talent in April?s draft by using early picks on tight end Tyler Eifert and running back Giovani Bernard, but Green is still sure to be Dalton?s top target and a driving force for the team?s entire offense again this season.

Brad Berreman is a contributing writer at Rant Sports.com. Follow him on Twitter @bradberreman24.

Source: http://www.rantsports.com/nfl/2013/08/04/most-irreplaceable-cincinnati-bengals-player-for-the-2013-nfl-season/

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Monotonous, rigid military prison life awaits Manning

By Jonathan Allen

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bradley Manning, the soldier convicted in the biggest leak of classified information in U.S. history, faces the prospect of years of monotony with no Internet access in a small military prison cell but he would likely be allowed to mix with other inmates and exercise outdoors.

The 25-year-old Manning, who has yet to be sentenced, would be able to nominate friends and relatives for visits pending official approval. A handshake, a brief kiss or a hug that does not involve touching below the waist are allowed during visits, and visitors and inmates may hold hands, according to regulations. Prisoners are allowed to telephone friends and family through payphones that may only be used at set times, but they are not permitted to send email or browse the Internet.

A military judge on Tuesday found the former low-level intelligence analyst guilty of 19 criminal charges, including espionage and theft, for giving about 700,000 classified diplomatic cables and war logs to the anti-secrecy WikiLeaks website in 2010 while he was serving in Iraq.

The U.S. Army Private First Class was acquitted at his two-month-long court-martial on the most serious charge of aiding the enemy, sparing him a life sentence without parole. But his convictions could draw a maximum term of 136 years.

Legal experts said the case was highly unusual and they were reluctant to predict the sentence. The judge has already ruled that 112 days will be deducted because Manning was mistreated in the months after his arrest in Baghdad in May 2010.

The sentencing phase of the court-martial at Fort Meade, Maryland, began on Wednesday and was expected to last at least until August 9, military officials said.

Any sentence longer than 10 years must be served at the United States Disciplinary Barracks in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, U.S. Army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel S. Justin Platt said. Manning could also serve time at a Fort Leavenworth military correctional facility, where the spokesman said he had been held pre-trial since April 2011.

Cells, which have walls rather than bars, contain a bed, a toilet and a sink, a desk and a locker, according to unclassified army regulations. The regulations say cells for one person must have 35 square feet (3.25 square meters) of unencumbered space. When confinement exceeds 10 hours per day, there must be at least 80 square feet (7.4 square meters) of total floor space.

TIGHTLY STRUCTURED DAYS

Several people familiar with the prisons described them as clean and relatively safe compared to civilian prisons but said the daily routine was monotonous and tightly structured.

"Most of those guys there have inculcated the hierarchy, the structure, the discipline the respect for authority," said Raelean Finch, a former army intelligence officer who co-writes a blog called "Captain Incarcerated" with a friend and former army colleague serving six years at the Barracks in Fort Leavenworth. (She asked that her friend not be identified further in order to preserve his pseudonym on the blog.)

Finch said that although "it's a tinderbox for sure, tempers flare and whatnot, everyone recognizes they're in a pretty safe situation."

She said many fear being "Fed-Exed" - the term used for being transferred to a civilian federal prison because prisons are perceived as being less disciplined and more violent.

Another blog, "Prison Pie," by a woman who posts her inmate brother's letters, details the routine: Breakfast starts at 5.30 a.m., work hours are between 7 a.m. and 11 a.m., then lunch at noon and back to work at 1 p.m. until 4 p.m., followed by dinner between 4.30 p.m. and 5.30 p.m. Work includes jobs such as catering, laundry, cleaning and yard maintenance.

There is a lockdown for head count twice a day and 3-1/2 hours of time is allotted for activities such as games and movies in the evening until 9.30 p.m.

MOSTLY PAP LITERATURE

Philip Cave, a lawyer who represents soldiers and visits military prisons, said Manning would be able to borrow from a limited list of books, particularly those with legal information that can help an inmate better understand their case, although there were a few more general-interest titles.

"Mostly pap," said Cave. He said military prisons were more restrictive than civilian prisons about books and magazines, although inmates are allowed to receive titles from friends and relatives that meet official approval.

The former officer Finch said her inmate friend uses a 1990s-vintage refurbished electronic word processor that meets prison guidelines to write his posts, which he prints and sends to her by regular mail since he can't use the Internet.

There is nothing to prevent an inmate writing for publication, the U.S. Army spokesman Platt said, although they may be prevented from receiving compensation for doing so. All correspondence, except between a client and a lawyer, is screened by prison officials.

Cave said that Manning, a slight man who looks younger than his 25 years and is gay, may encounter homophobia, and some inmates may view him as a traitor, although others convicted of espionage are serving time in Fort Leavenworth.

"They may take some extra precautions in the beginning to make sure of his safety," Cave said.

Finch said her inmate friend knew of a number of openly gay inmates. According to him, they do not generally encounter prejudice, tend to socialize among themselves, and sometimes dated within the strictures of a prison environment.

MANNING IN "CAGE" AFTER ARREST

Manning's lawyers and civil rights groups complained that he was mistreated during initial detention in Kuwait and nine months he spent in solitary confinement at a U.S. Marine Corps jail in Quantico, Virginia.

A United Nations special rapporteur on torture formally accused the U.S. government of cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment of Manning. A government lawyer responded that the United States was satisfied Manning had been placed in the same type of cell as other pre-trial detainees.

At Quantico, Manning was confined to his cell for 23 hours a day, required to sleep naked and was woken often during the night, military officials said. They said those measures were necessary because of concern that Manning was suicidal.

To compensate for that treatment, the court-martial judge, Colonel Denise Lind, ruled that 112 days should be deducted from any sentence she imposes.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Writing by Grant McCool; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/monotonous-rigid-military-prison-life-awaits-manning-120154089.html

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Google takes note of Island scientist Bitners

Thirteen-year-old Mercer Island native Larissa Bitners is not your typical teenager.

Recently selected as one of the 90 finalists in the global Google Science Fair competition, the singularly gifted Bitners is already trailblazing new paths in the world of science.

Google?s online science competition invites young people from around the world to ?be curious, ask questions, and perform science experiments to answer those questions.? Last year?s winner from the 13-14 age group worked to help individuals with hearing loss enjoy a superior music experience by employing multi-frequency tactile sound.

Bitners? project involved experimenting whether a parabolic reflector could expand the range of a wireless network signal, and increase its security by directing radio waves to a particular area while blocking signals from neighboring properties. And if that sounds complicated, you?re certainly not alone.

Dubbed ?the fix-it girl? by her mother, Melinda, Bitners has had a knack for technology and science her entire life.

?She was one of those babies who took apart the remote control,? Melinda recalls. At age 7, Bitners dismantled and reassembled a transistor radio, and would later express puzzlement when discovering that her father didn?t know how to put window wipers on the family car, to her a seemingly uncomplicated task.

Tonya van Orden, her science teacher at Islander Middle School, asked her class to create projects in response to the same questions that the Google Science Fair had requested that contestants explore. However, the students weren?t required to submit their projects for actual competition.

Completed in merely a week and tested with the help of her dad, Bitners didn?t register that her project was something out of the ordinary, until van Orden approached Melinda Bitners with the suggestion that her daughter enter the project in the international competition.

?It was original,? van Orden recalls. After three years of giving out the assignment, van Orden had seen many students devise similar experiments, until Bitners handed in her project. She characterized her student?s work as clear and simple, a rare trait in science experiments these days.

?As scientists, we have to make what we do understandable to the rest of the world,? van Orden explains. Bitners did just that with her accessible and practical experiment.

She sat on the idea of submitting it to the global competition for a long time, and waited until minutes before the deadline to submit her experiment.

Her decision paid off, and Bitners was announced as one of 90 regional finalists from around the globe.

Not overly concerned with the outcome, one might find Bitners playing video games or practicing percussion for Islander Middle School?s jazz band instead of fretting over the Google Science Fair?s ultimate decision. Despite her cool and collected exterior, her mother suspects that she is excited about Google Science Fair?s recognition of her work.

?I think she is probably pretty proud of how far she?s gotten,? her mother said. And proud she should be.

Though Bitners narrowly missed making one of the top 15 spots when they were announced on June 27, Melinda explains that this development is something her daughter is not at all discouraged by, as ?she didn?t think her project was earth-changing.? Other experiments from her age group that advanced in the competition involved helping endangered species and solving the shortage crisis of rare-earth elements. However, Melinda is sure her daughter will compete in the Google Science Fair again in the future.

Having only just finished eighth grade, Larissa Bitners should be on Mercer Island?s radar as one to watch in coming years.

?

Contact Mercer Island Reporter Intern Jennifer Flick at jflick@mi-reporter.com or 206-232-1215 ext. 5058.

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/mirlifestyles/~3/alNAvquSJd0/215845081.html

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GOP to pitch food stamps cut

By Frank Thorp and Ian Johnston, NBC News

House Republican leaders are to present a bill that would cut the food stamps program by $40 billion over 10 years, a move opposed by Democrats.

Republicans say the program, whose enrollment soared after the 2008-09 recession, is unbearably expensive at $78 billion a year.

Democrats such as Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts say food stamps mitigate hunger in a still-weak economy.

One in seven Americans received food stamps -- the largest U.S. anti-hunger program ? at the latest count, Reuters said.

Doug Heye, the deputy chief of staff for House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said in a statement Thursday that the bill would ?include common-sense measures, such as work requirements and job-training requirements for able-bodied adults without children receiving assistance, that enjoy a broad range of support.?

The bill was worked up by Cantor and Frank Lucas, chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, and will be considered by House Republicans after the August recess.

Collin Peterson, D-Minn., ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee, said there would be ?no Democratic votes? for the food stamp bill.

He said it was ?very disappointing,? adding that the cuts might even be too tough for some Republicans to support.

?I don?t know what the hell they?re trying to do other than placate the Wall Street Journal and the Club for Growth and the Heritage, I don't know what they're doing,? Peterson said.

Lucas told Reuters that the legislation on food stamps would be part of any talks with the Senate on a new U.S. farm law costing $100 billion a year.

The House needs to pass a bill to fund food stamp programs after they pulled the provision out of the farm bill in an effort to pass it without Democratic votes.?

Republican leadership was stunned when the Farm Bill, with the food stamp provisions included, failed on the House floor on June 20.?

Reuters contributed to this report.

Related:

Source: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/08/02/19831109-republicans-to-propose-40-billion-cut-over-decade-to-food-stamps-program?lite&ocid=msnhp&pos=5

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Saturday, August 3, 2013

US employers add 162K jobs; rate falls to 7.4 pct.

WASHINGTON (AP) ? U.S. employers added 162,000 jobs in July, a modest increase and the fewest since March. At the same time, the unemployment rate fell to a 4?-year low of 7.4 percent, a hopeful sign.

Unemployment declined from 7.6 percent in June because more Americans found jobs, and others stopped looking and were no longer counted as unemployed.

Still, Friday's report from the Labor Department pointed to a less-than-robust job market. It suggested that the economy's subpar growth and modest consumer spending are making many businesses cautious about hiring.

The government said employers added a combined 26,000 fewer jobs in May and June than it previously estimated. Americans worked fewer hours in July, and their average pay dipped. And many of the jobs employers added last month were for lower-paying work at stores, bars and restaurants.

For the year, job growth has remained steady. The economy has added an average 200,000 jobs a month since January, though the pace has slowed in the past three months to 175,000.

Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, called the employment report "slightly negative," in part because job growth for May and June was revised down.

Scott Anderson, chief economist at Bank of the West, said it showed "a mixed labor market picture of continued improvement but at a still frustratingly slow pace."

The reaction from investors was slightly downbeat. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 17 points in early-afternoon trading, and broader stock indexes also declined. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.62 percent from 2.71 percent.

The Federal Reserve will review the July employment data in deciding whether to slow its $85 billion a month in bond purchases in September, as many economists have predicted it will do. Weaker hiring could make the Fed hold off on any pullback in its bond buying, which has helped keep long-term borrowing costs down.

Beth Ann Bovino, senior economist at Standard & Poor's, said she thinks Friday's report will make the Fed delay a slowdown in bond buying.

"September seems very unlikely now," she says. "I'm wondering if December is still in the cards."

Still, it's possible that the lower unemployment rate, along with the hiring gains over the past year, could convince the Fed that the job market is strengthening consistently.

"While July itself was a bit disappointing, the Fed will be looking at the cumulative improvement," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. "On that score, the unemployment rate has fallen from 8.1 percent last August to 7.4 percent this July, which is a significant improvement."

The decline in unemployment to 7.4 percent was derived from a survey of households, which found that 227,000 more people said they were employed last month. And 37,000 people stopped looking for work and were no longer counted as unemployed.

The job gain for the month was calculated from a separate survey of employers.

More than half of July's job gain came from lower-paying industries, extending a trend that is limiting Americans' incomes and possibly slowing consumer spending. Retailers, for example, added nearly 47,000 jobs ? the biggest gain for any industry last month. Restaurants and bars added 38,400.

Low-paying industries have accounted for 61 percent of jobs added this year, even though they represent only 39 percent of U.S. jobs overall, according to Labor Department numbers analyzed by Moody's Analytics. Mid-paying industries have accounted for fewer than 22 percent of the jobs added.

Some job gains were made in higher-paying fields last month. Financial services, which includes banking, real estate and insurance, added 15,000. Information technology added 4,300, accounting 2,500. And manufacturing added 6,000 jobs, though that figure was offset by an equivalent loss in construction.

One growing source of better-paying jobs is local governments. They've now added jobs for five straight months and have helped offset job cuts by state and federal governments.

The result is that governments overall are much less of a drag on hiring than they were earlier in the economic recovery. All told, they've shed 39,000 jobs in the 12 months that ended in July. That's down from a loss of 137,000 in the 12 months that ended in July 2012.

Most of the hiring by local governments has been for teachers and other jobs related to education. Local property tax revenue, a key source of funding for counties and cities, fell after the recession but has begun to recover in some communities. Nationwide, home prices have risen steadily, a trend that typically leads to higher property tax revenue.

More broadly, many of the jobs that were added in July are only part time. The number of Americans who said they were working part time but would prefer full-time work stands at 8.2 million ? the highest since last fall. Part-time jobs account for 65 percent of the jobs added in July and 77 percent of those added this year.

The percentage of Americans either working or actively looking for work dipped in July to 63.4 percent. This is called the "labor force participation rate." The participation rate has been generally declining since peaking at 67.3 percent in 2000. That's partly the result of baby boomers retiring and leaving the workforce.

Job gains are being slowed by the economy's tepid growth. It grew at an annual rate of just 1.7 percent in the April-June quarter, the government said this week. That was an improvement over the previous two quarters, but it's still far too weak to rapidly lower unemployment.

Recent data suggest that the economy could strengthen in the second half of the year. A survey Thursday showed, for example, that factories increased production and received a surge of orders in July, propelling the fastest expansion in more than two years.

The survey, by the Institute for Supply Management, also showed that the housing recovery is spurring more output by lumber companies, furniture makers and appliance manufacturers.

Businesses have ordered more industrial machinery and other equipment for four straight months. Europe's troubled economies are showing signs of recovery, potentially a lift to U.S. exports.

U.S. automakers are reporting their best sales since the recession, a sign that Americans are confident enough in their finances to make large purchases. Car sales rose 14 percent in July from 12 months earlier to 1.3 million.

Healthy sales have encouraged more hiring by Ford Motor Co. The company said last week that it will hire 800 salaried professionals this year, mostly in areas like information technology, product development and quality control.

___

AP Economics Writers Paul Wiseman and Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

___

Follow Christopher S. Rugaber at http://twitter.com/ChrisRugaber .

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/us-employers-add-162k-jobs-rate-falls-7-134459741.html

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Report: The CIA Has Been Polygraphing Operatives to Stop Benghazi Leaks

The CIA is subjecting operatives working in Libya to polygraphs as much as once a month to stop them from leaking to the press or Congress about Benghazi, CNN's Jake Tapper reports. Usually, CIA operatives are polygraphed only once every three or four years. ?"It is being described as pure intimidation, with the threat that any unauthorized CIA employee who leaks information could face the end of his or her career," CNN reports. The CIA told CNN that it has been cooperating with congressional oversight committees and "CIA employees are always free to speak to Congress if they want."

RELATED: Pentagon Denies Fox News Benghazi Report

The story suggests the CIA wants to keep its operations in Benghazi secret, not specifically what happened the night of the attacks. It was not until weeks after the Benghazi attacks that it was reported the diplomatic facility there was mostly a CIA operation. Two former Navy SEALs who died during the attack were reportedly CIA contractors. Now CNN reports that 21 people were working at the CIA annex on the night of the attacks, while a total of 35 people were working at the mission. (This tracks with estimates in earlier reporting.) What were they doing there? That's been the subject of much speculation for months. In?March, Sen.?Rand Paul floated the theory?that the Obama administration was covering up a gun-running operation to arm Syrian rebels. In May, Paul speculated?on CNN. "I?ve actually always suspected that, although I have no evidence, that maybe we were facilitating arms leaving Libya going through Turkey into Syria."

RELATED: How Petraeus Turned the CIA into the Good Guys in Benghazi

The CNN report offers a nod to that:

The State Department told CNN in an e-mail that it was only helping the new Libyan government destroy weapons deemed "damaged, aged or too unsafe retain," and that it was not involved in any transfer of weapons to other countries.

But the State Department also clearly told CNN, they "can't speak for any other agencies."

On Thursday, House Oversight Committee chair Darrell Issa subpoenaed more State Department documents related to Benghazi. Issa is seeking interviews and documents collected by an independent review board. The initial focus of the Benghazi controversy was who wrote the talking points for then-U.N. ambassador Susan Rice to use on five Sunday shows after the attacks. But as Paul's comments show, the controversy seems to be evolving.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/report-cia-polygraphing-operatives-stop-benghazi-leaks-220800432.html

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Feds, states want Apple to revamp e-book practices

(AP) ? The Justice Department and 33 state attorneys general on Friday said they want to force Apple to sign contracts with publishers that don't prevent Apple or other e-book stores from competing on price.

A federal judge ruled last month that Apple Inc. colluded with publishers to raise e-book prices. The Cupertino, Calif., company has denied wrongdoing and has said it will appeal the decision.

The Justice Department and the attorneys general told the court Friday that they want Apple to tear up its contracts with five e-book publishers and sign new ones that aren't likely to increase prices. In addition, they want Apple to allow rival e-book sellers like Amazon.com Inc. and Barnes & Noble Inc. to provide links inside their iPhone and iPad apps to their own book stores.

Apple allows Amazon and Barnes & Noble's apps to load books that have already been purchased, but doesn't allow the apps to sell books or link to online bookstores.

Apple did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

The book publishers previously settled the price-fixing charges. They are Hachette, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Holtzbrinck Publishers, doing business as Macmillan, and The Penguin Publishing Co. Ltd., doing business as Penguin Group. The settlements were designed to encourage price competition and discounting, but that hasn't happened.

The government alleged that the publishers colluded with Apple to move the e-book industry away from the wholesale model employed by Amazon, which had unnerved publishers by selling e-book versions of popular hardcover titles for $9.99 before the April 2010 release of Apple's iPad. Under its contracts with publishers, Amazon was free to sell books at any price it wanted. Apple instead adopted the "agency" model, under which publishers set the retail price and the store takes a cut. Under that model, the store can't discount a book.

In her ruling, the judge said the conspiracy harmed consumers in numerous ways. Some had to pay more for e-books, she said. Others bought a cheaper e-book rather than the one they preferred to purchase and others deferred a purchase altogether rather than pay the higher price.

The settlements with the publishers removed the shackles that prevented Amazon from discounting, but the $9.99 price for e-books that publishers dreaded has become increasingly rare.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-08-02-US-Electronic-Books-Antitrust-Lawsuit/id-7fc8e9e71ba64f87907198d329b42ff2

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The American Nightmare

fear-loathing-3Inside a casino whose theme is an empire that collapsed into venal decadence, middle-aged computer-security professionals clutching plastic cups half-full of free Veuve Clicquot line up to collect VIP nightclub passes. Outside, teenagers who live in tunnels beg on the pedestrian overpasses. Earlier, the man turning today's empire into a surveillance state was met with warm applause.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/lNO8nTBicBQ/

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Closing Bell for Friday on Wall Street: Markets Open Lower, Climb Higher by Close

August 2, 2013: U.S. equity markets opened lower this morning following a mixed report on U.S. employment. The monthly report on personal income and outlays was also a mixed bag, with core prices rising 0.2% at the same time that personal income rose 0.3%. U.S. factory orders in June were also weaker than expected. In Europe, the eurozone producer price index was unchanged and the number of unemployed in Spain did not fall as much as expected. There was little economic data out in Asia as well.

The U.S. dollar index is trading lower today, now down 0.49% at 81.9300. The GSCI commodity index is up 1.3% at 646.77. WTI crude oil closed down 0.9% today, at $106.94 a barrel. Brent crude trades down 0.36% at $108.87 a barrel. Natural gas is down 1.2% today at about $3.35 per million BTUs. Gold for December delivery settled down less than 0.1% today at $1,310.50 an ounce.

The Most Corrupt Countries in the World

The unofficial closing bells put the DJIA up more than 30 points to 15,658.36 (0.19%), the NASDAQ rose nearly 14 points (0.38%) to 3,689.59, and the S&P 500 rose 0.16% or nearly 3 points to 1,709.67.

There were a several analyst upgrades and downgrades?today, including:

  • Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc. (LGND) cut to ?sell? at Cantor Fitzgerald;
  • Marathon Petroleum Corp. (MPC) cut to ?neutral? at Macquarie;
  • Groupon Inc. (GRPN) raised to ?equal weight? and price target raised to $8 at Evercore;
  • Twenty-First Century Fox Inc. (FOXA) added to U.S. Focus List at Credit Suisse; and
  • General Dynamics Corp. (GD) reiterated as ?buy? and price target raised to $98 at Argus.

Earnings reports since markets closed last night resulted in some prices move today:

  • Activision Blizzard Inc. (ATVI) is down 0.3% at $18.14;
  • Kraft Foods Group Inc. (KRFT) is up 0.4% at $57.40;
  • LinkedIn Corp. (LNKD) is up 10.7% at $235.71 after posting a new 52-week high of $237.93 earlier today following last night?s stellar earnings report;
  • Tesoro Corp. (TSO) is down 4.2% at $55.33;
  • Alpha Natural Resources Inc. (ANR) is down 8.1% at $4.99 on weak earnings;
  • Cablevision Systems Corp. (CVC) is up 5% at $19.58 after posting a new 52-week high of $20.16 earlier today;
  • Chevron Corp. (CVX) is down 1.3% at $124.77 after soft earnings; and
  • The Washington Post Co. (WPO) is up 1.9% at $559.51 after posting a new 52-week high of $563.20 earlier today.

Before markets open Monday morning we are scheduled to hear earnings results from FreightCar America Inc. (RAIL) and Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN).

Famous Restaurant Chains That Are Hard to Find

Some standouts among heavily traded stocks today include:

Dell Inc. (DELL) is up 5.4% at $13.65. The computer maker?s board has sided with Michael Dell and Silver Lake in their attempt to take the company private. Carl Icahn is not amused.

Athlon Energy Inc. (ATHL) is up 34.8% at $26.96. The oil and gas exploration & production company held its IPO today.

Weight Watchers International Inc. (WTW) is down 19.6% at $37.83 after posting a new 52-week low of $37.26 earlier today. The weight loss and nutrition company cut its annual guidance and named a new CEO quite suddenly today.

Stay tuned for Monday. Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher is giving a speech. We have also noted the following events on the schedule (all times Eastern):

  • 10:00 a.m. - ISM non-manufacturing index
  • 11:30 a.m. - 3- and 6-month bill auctions

Have a great weekend!

Related Articles

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/closing-bell-friday-wall-street-200456618.html

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?Extreme Weight Loss? Episode Highlights Black Women's Deep ...

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Chantell, at 327 pounds

If you got a chance to catch ABC?s ?Extreme Weight Loss? on Tuesday, then you got to meet the intelligent, beautiful, bubbly, ambitious and morbidly obese Chantell. At only 25 years-old, she weighed in at 327 pounds. But according to her family, she looks ?just fine.? This, coming from a family plagued with diabetes and other obesity-related health problems.

Chantell?s mother, who is only 16 years younger, was always first to discourage her from shedding the fat. Here?s what we hear her say: ?What you need to go to the gym for? As long as you?re not too-too out of breath then you?re okay.?

?It?s almost abnormal to eat healthy in my family,? said Chantell.

What. The. Cuss. I can?t.

The second-biggest detractor was her boyfriend, who was adamant that he didn?t want her to lose her ?butt and breasts.? Yeah dude, because a big ass and tits are WAAAAY more important than reducing your risk of heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes. Thankfully, his insecurity revealed itself and the relationship ended. I guess he only felt better about himself when Chantell felt bad about herself. Good riddance. I have no pity for people who stand in the way of someone else?s dreams or personal growth. These individuals are toxic and Raid should develop a formula to keep these undesireables at bay.

An eye into dysfunction?

Chantell always had to sacrifice and rescue her family. Grown women way older than her are abnormally dependent upon her to ?save? them. At one point in the show, Chantell stands up to the mother and tells her that for the year that is trying to lose the weight, she will focus on HERSELF FIRST. Her mother, had the NERVE to grimace. ?When her mother realized Chantell was going to go back to finish college courtesy of ABC, her mother cried. She said, ?Chantell will get to do things that I didn?t get to do,? and I wonder if the mother was crying more for herself. No wonder so many black women are digging their own graves with a fork and spoon?they carry too much, and are expected to mule themselves for people who deem their progress as a person threat to their own comfort.

It?s one thing is YOU don?t want to change. It?s an entire other thing to sabotage the desire that another person has to live healthfully and be successful. The fact that it is coming from a mother is even more disturbing and infuriating, and sadly, not uncommon.

The GREAT News?

Chantell showed tremendous determination.?Despite all the challenges, obstacles, and folks standing in her sunshine, it was delightful to see Chantell?s body and attitude change. As she lost the distorting weight, you could really see her beauty come through. What is more, she just got a whole life re-write with a chance to be her BEST self. ?I loved how even when she had setbacks and didn?t meet her fitness goals, she perservered. It?s what I always say (and get my teeth kicked in for) is that if we shed the debilitating ?fat sack? that we envelope ourselves in, the beauty and confidence is impossible to ignore.

XWL_2013050004_WhereAreTheyNowEp203_BehindTheScenes_HD1080p_b844baea-86f6-4270-b16e-85580f071717_5380356_source

Chantell ?After? at 185 pounds

So GLAD ?Exteme Weight Loss? is bringing to the forefront that 4 out of five black women are overweight. Time for us to get our head?s out of the sand. The denial simply MUST cease. The trainer was very candid about how it was a certainty that she would lose her life to heart disease, stroke, or complications from diabetes, and thank goodness, Chantell took that seriously.

Check of the video on where Chantell is up to since she shed half her weight?

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Source: http://www.beyondblackwhite.com/extreme-weight-loss-episode-puts-crabs-in-a-barrel-full-display/

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Cory Monteith Tribute Planned For Emmys

September ceremony will contain 'something that reflects an homage,' according to the show's producer.
By Gil Kaufman

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711611/cory-monteith-emmys-tribute-details.jhtml

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The Sun News Tragedy hits Enugu family

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Tragedy hits Enugu family. ?3 children of same mother die after cassava meal in one day ?Father passed on same way 2 yrs ago. From Kassidy Uchendu, Nsukka. Three children of the same mother, have reportedly died after taking cassava meal suspected to be poisoned. The tragedy ... When Daily Sun visited the home of the bereaved parents, the younger brother to the deceased, Mr. Hyginus Ugwuanyi, a postgraduate student of UNN, was still in shock. ?I cannot ...

Source: http://sunnewsonline.com/new/cover/tragedy-hits-enugu-family/

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Pacific Rim Has Sequel Potential Due to Record Breaking Chinese Opening

Aug 1, 2013 by Brian Gallagher Pacific Rim Chinese opening boosts sequel prospects

Pacific Rim Chinese opening boosts sequel prospects

Although Pacific Rim 2 has been in development since December, when screenwriter Travis Beacham signed on to write the sequel, we haven't heard much about the follow-up, given Pacific Rim has only earned $84 million domestically after three weeks. Today, we have word that sequel talks are heating up, after director Guillermo del Toro's action-thriller broke box office records in China.

The movie earned a record-breaking $9 million in its first day of release in China, the most ever for a Warner Bros. movie, 23% more than any Harry Potter earned in the country. It also had an enormous 70% of the market share during the Wednesday opening. The creature feature was also the top international movie over the July 19-21 weekend, where it opened in less than half of worldwide territories. As of now, Pacific Rim has earned $140 million in 52 territories, with a worldwide gross of $224 million, from a budget estimated between $180 million and $220 million.

Back in February, Guillermo del Toro revealed he is in no rush to direct Pacific Rim 2, with other projects such as Crimson Peak and The Strain currently on his development slate.

Pacific Rim 2 comes to theaters in 2016.

Pacific Rim was released July 12th, 2013 and stars Charlie Hunnam, Diego Klattenhoff, Idris Elba, Rinko Kikuchi, Charlie Day, Burn Gorman, Max Martini, Robert Kazinsky. The film is directed by Guillermo del Toro.

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Source: http://www.movieweb.com/news/pacific-rim-has-sequel-potential-due-to-record-breaking-chinese-opening

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Obama honors NCAA champions UConn women

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama honored the University of Connecticut women's basketball team Wednesday, calling its players incredible athletes, outstanding women, and role models on and off the court.

Obama welcomed the Huskies at a White House ceremony commemorating their eighth NCAA championship. In April the Huskies defeated Louisville 93-60 in the tournament final.

Obama joked that Coach Geno Auriemma "spends more time than some presidents" at the executive mansion. Auriemma quipped that "it doesn't get old" as he and the team presented Obama with an autographed basketball and jacket.

Obama said the Huskies won for being at their best when the stakes were high. He singled out Breanna Stewart, who was named most outstanding player of the Final Four.

The president also highlighted the team's community service, such as visiting seriously ill children at the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp and joining in the Walk for Autism.

The president said he was especially proud of the players for being role models to his daughters Sasha, 12, and Malia. 15.

"As the father of two young, beautiful, athletic and tall daughters, it just always puts a smile on my face whenever I see such class acts represent their school and their country so well," he said.

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_OBAMA_NCAA_CHAMPIONS?SITE=MOPAR&SECTION=POLITICS&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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