Sunday, October 20, 2013

Corporate Japan to hunker down and save gains from tax cut: Reuters poll


By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Izumi Nakagawa


TOKYO (Reuters) - More than 40 percent of Japanese companies surveyed have no plans to spend or invest funds generated by an expected cut in the corporate tax rate, a reflection of the deep-seated risk-aversion in corporate Japan and a challenge to the success of Abenomics.


The result of the Reuters Corporate Survey of 400 companies taken in late September and early October stands in contrast to other recent indicators of a thawing in corporate risk-aversion on signs of continued recovery in Japan's economy.


In the monthly Reuters survey, 30 percent of companies said they would bank any savings from a lower corporate tax rate and build up internal reserves, which now total more than $2 trillion for Japan's corporations taken as a whole.


Another 12 percent of companies responding said they would use any cash generated by a corporate tax cut pledged by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to offset the expected higher costs from a sales tax increase set to take effect in April.


Abe's government is seeking an early end to a corporate tax levy that has funded rebuilding from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. That step is projected to save companies some 900 billion yen ($9.1 billion) as part of a stimulus package worth more than 5 trillion yen to be compiled in December.


Most companies surveyed by Reuters said a corporate tax cut would be positive for earnings: 54 percent said it would boost profit, while 46 percent said it would have no effect.


But only a minority of companies surveyed said they were ready to use the additional earnings in the areas most crucial to the success of the prime minister's "Abenomics" economic program - investment in plants and equipment and higher wages for Japanese workers.


Only 5 percent of companies responding said they would use the additional savings to raise wages. Another 5 percent said they intended to use the savings from a tax cut to increase hiring.


"Our profit-and-loss conditions are improving, but the situation remains far from assured. We need to stick to internal reserves," said one machinery maker.


About one in five respondents said they would use the savings from the tax cut to offset the cost of updating and replacing ageing equipment and plants.


HOARDING CASH


For years Japanese firms have been hoarding cash, instead of spending on plants and equipment or raising salaries, due in part to the view that Japan would remain mired in deflation. As a result, corporate Japan is sitting on a cash pile of some 220 trillion yen, Bank of Japan data shows.


Abe has also instructed his government and ruling coalition to start considering a permanent cut in the effective corporate tax rate, set at 38 percent for a large Tokyo-based corporation, which is higher than the global average of 24 percent.


Analysts have cautioned that the economic boost from a corporate tax cut could be muted. After two decades of slow growth and deflation, only about 30 percent of companies pay corporate tax. The rest are either unprofitable or they are able to apply tax credits accumulated from losses incurred during the lean years.


The Reuters Corporate Survey was taken between September 30 and October 11 alongside the Reuters Tankan survey of business sentiment.


That indicator showed confidence among manufacturers was steady in October, a sign the positive mood generated by Abe's reflationary policies is continuing.


Other recent indicators have also been positive. Earlier this month, the Bank of Japan offered a slightly more upbeat assessment of capital spending, saying corporate investment was picking up as profits improve.


Abe's government has kept pressure on large companies to raise wages when annual negotiations begin in early 2014. Hiromasa Yonekura, chairman of the business lobby Keidanren, said earlier this month that Japan's business leaders wanted to address government calls for higher compensation as the economy recovers "proactively and in a timely manner."


The Corporate Survey, conducted for Reuters by Nikkei Research, polls upper management at 400 companies capitalised at more than 1 billion yen each. The firms, which are split evenly between manufacturers and non-manufacturers, are not required to answer every question and provide responses on condition of anonymity.


(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and Chris Gallagher)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/corporate-japan-hunker-down-save-gains-tax-cut-010935386--business.html
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Hans Zimmer to Discuss 'Rush' at Billboard-THR Film & TV Music Conference


Composer Hans Zimmer and his colleagues on Rush -- Peter Asher and Lorne Balfe -- will discuss the music in the Ron Howard-directed hit film at the Billboard & Hollywood Reporter Film and TV Music Conference.



"Case Study: The Music of Rush" will explore Zimmer’s composing methods and recording techniques on the film about Formula 1 race car drivers Niki Lauda and James Hunt. ASCAP is sponsoring the Oct. 29 panel at the W Hotel in Hollywood


Rush is the latest film score from Zimmer, whose music has graced more than 100 movies that have grossed more than $22 billion at the worldwide box office. Honored with the ASCAP Henry Mancini Award for Lifetime Achievement, he has also received an Academy Award, two Golden Globes and four Grammy Awards.


Among his films are The Lion King, Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, Gore Verbinski’s Pirates of the Caribbean series; Christopher Nolan’s three Batman films, Howard’s The Da Vinci Code and Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave.


PHOTOS: 'Rush': Exclusive Photos of Ron Howard, Chris Hemsworth and Daniel Bruhl


Joining Zimmer will be Asher, the film’s music consultant and producer, and Balfe, a composer. Besides Rush, Asher produced the music for Zimmer’s scores to Pirates of the Caribbean 4, Sherlock Holmes 2, Madagascar 3 and Man of Steel.


Asher, one half of the pop duo Peter & Gordon, became head of A&R for Apple Records in 1968 and in 1971, founded Peter Asher Management, representing James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Randy Newman and others.


A producer as well, in 1977 and 1989 Asher received the Grammy for Producer of the Year and most recently produced Steve Martin and Edie Brickell’s album Love Has Come For You. He also just completed a project for Elton John with current artists singing songs from Goodbye Yellow Brick Road to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the album.


VIDEO: Hans Zimmer Conducts 12 Drummers for the 'Man of Steel' Soundtrack


Balfe, a composer from Inverness, Scotland, most recently scored Shane Salerno’s feature documentary Salinger. Known for his work on video games, his credits include Assassin’s Creed III and Beyond: Two Souls.


This year's Film and TV Music Conference's programming highlights include: Singer-songwriter and composer Randy Newman, who will deliver a keynote Q&A conducted by his son, Amos Newman, the head of music for visual media at William Morris Endeavor; T Bone Burnett, who will be honored with the Maestro Award for his seminal work in film and television music, most recently as executive music producer of the Coen Brothers' Inside Llewyn Davis; a keynote Q&A by music supervisor Alexandra Patsavas, whose credits include Scandal, Carrie Diaries and the upcoming film The Hunger Games: Catching Fire; director David O. Russell and music supervisor Sue Jacobs, who will discuss their work on the highly anticipated film American Hustle and last year’s award-winning Silver Linings Playbook; and the expansion of one-on-one meetings and single-topic roundtables with industry experts.


Please visit www.FilmandTVMusicConference.com for more information.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/music/~3/fsjMfcax8dY/story01.htm
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Treasury: credit warning a sign of urgency in debt debate


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury said on Tuesday the threat of a credit rating downgrade is a reminder for U.S. lawmakers that the United States is dangerously close to defaulting on its obligations.


Fitch Ratings warned earlier in the day it could cut the sovereign credit rating of the United States from AAA, citing the political brinkmanship over raising the federal debt ceiling.


"The announcement reflects the urgency with which Congress should act to remove the threat of default hanging over the economy," a Treasury spokesperson said.


(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Sandra Maler)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/treasury-credit-warning-sign-urgency-debt-debate-211232563--business.html
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Windows 8.1, One-Handed Future Zippers, Cheating at Physics, And More

Windows 8.1, One-Handed Future Zippers, Cheating at Physics, And More

Who'd have thought one of the awesomest things we'd see this week would be a zipper. But that's not all! Join us for a tour of the cave beneath Central Park, at look at Windows 8.1, an explanation of the iPhone 5s acceleromter problems and more.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/w5wExctf3NU/windows-8-1-one-handed-future-zippers-cheating-at-phy-1448209741
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Warner Bros.-Owned Producer of 'The Voice UK' Names New CEO


LONDON – U.K. TV production and distribution firm Shed Media Group, which is majority owned by Warner Bros., said Thursday that it has appointed Leanne Klein as CEO of its Wall to Wall unit.



She most recently served as creative director of Wall to Wall, which produces such shows as The Voice UK.


Klein replaces Alex Graham who will help with the handover of responsibilities until the end of the year. Graham will also remain "intimately connected with the company he helped found" by serving as an executive producer on the U.S. version of Wall to Wall hit genealogy format Who Do You Think You Are?, the company said.
 
Wall to Wall was named U.K. production company of the year at the annual Edinburgh Television Festival Awards this summer.
 
Klein has been at Wall to Wall since 1995 when she won an Emmy for directing her first series for the company, Baby It’s You. She has since then creatively overseen such shows as The Voice UK, Long Lost Family, Child Genius and Alfred Hitchcock biopic The Girl.
 
"Leanne is a brilliant creative television executive and she has Wall to Wall running through her veins," said Shed CEO Nick Southgate. "I’m absolutely delighted she’s agreed to take over from Alex. Alex is one of the titans of the independent production sector, but I can’t think of anyone better to fill his large shoes."


Said Klein: "I know I’m biased, but the fact that Wall to Wall makes such fantastic shows across...different genres – including a raft of returning hits – means, for me, there’s no production company in the U.K. that could be more exciting to run."


While she became Wall to Wall's creative director in March 2011, Klein first started working for the company in 1990 and joined it in a permanent role in 1995.


E-mail: Georg.Szalai@THR.com
Twitter: @georgszalai


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/m_qgmuCuG-o/story01.htm
Tags: michigan football   never forget   Placenta   meteor shower   mick jagger  

Girl's Deportation Was Mishandled, But Legal, French Say





Leonarda Dibrani, 15, on Friday in Mitrovica, Kosovo.



Visar Kryeziu /AP


Leonarda Dibrani, 15, on Friday in Mitrovica, Kosovo.


Visar Kryeziu /AP


"An interior ministry investigation into the controversial deportation of a Roma schoolgirl from France has found that her deportation was lawful, but said police could have used better judgment in the case," France 24 is reporting.


As Eleanor Beardsley reported for All Things Considered on Friday, 15-year-old Leonarda Dibrani "is at the center of an emotional debate in France over the country's immigration policies. ... [She] was taken away by police during a field trip with her school class last week and deported along with her parents and five siblings to Kosovo. Many French are outraged at the way she was seized. And whether the deportation was legal or not, many say the action runs contrary to French human rights values."


France 24 writes today that "French law bans the police from approaching students while they are at or near school. The report stated that while the bus was nowhere near Dibrani's school, authorities showed a lack of judgement and recommended that the law be changed to prohibit any future incidents during school hours."


France's RFI radio network adds that Leonarda "says she will not take up President François Hollande's offer to return to France without her family ... declaring that she would not 'abandon' her family."


Eleanor noted that "the case has echoes of the debate in the U.S. over immigration and the status of those who came to the country illegally as children and have little or no connection to the land of their birth. French media are reporting that the Dibrani family came illegally to France from Kosovo about five years ago because they are Roma, sometimes referred to as Gypsies, and faced discrimination and few opportunities there."


RFI reports, though, that Leonarda's father "told the AFP news agency that only he had been born in Kosovo and that his wife and five of his six children, including Leonarda, were born in Italy."


National Geographic has an online "history of the Romani people," who are "more commonly known to outsiders as Gypsies."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/19/237636824/girls-deportation-was-mishandled-but-legal-french-say?ft=1&f=1004
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Debt Ceiling Deal Depends On U.S. Senate


The Senate has been working on a bipartisan deal to reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling. But House conservatives have signaled they might not go along with a Senate deal. Steve Inskeep talks to Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia about how he thinks the impasse can be resolved.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235235700/sen-chambliss-comments-on-government-shutdown?ft=1&f=3
Category: Malala Yousafzai   Henry Blackaby   twin towers   pharrell   Larry Shippers  

Live Chat: UFC 166 preview, Bellator pay-per-view and more


I can only speak from personal experience and due to the volume of combat sports I watch, very little of it gets me excited or out of my chair. I can also say without hesitation UFC 166 is one such an event.


Ultimately, we'll have to see how the fights play out, but in terms of pre-fight anticipation, this one is most certainly forcing me to think about what could happen, what it all might mean and how fun it all might be. That's what a special event should and does do.


However, there's some hand wringing going on about Bellator's pay-per-view. Innumerable questions and claims are made about the event and how, if it goes poorly, it would spell the end for Bellator. None of this could be further from the truth.


There's a lot going on, so join me today to discuss all of this and more. In terms of today's chat, anything is up for discussion, but I will lead with this and it all kicks off at 1 p.m. ET.


As is customary, I'll post the video window here as the event draws near and I'll answer any questions you may have if you post them in the comments section below. Be sure that you click the 'rec' button for those comments/questions you believe most deserve a response.


Be sure to link this page and use the hashtag #chatwrappers on Twitter or even Facebook when you're watching this to let everyone know you're taking part is this activity of ours.


Talk with you all at 1 p.m. ET.


Source: http://www.mmafighting.com/2013/10/16/4844320/live-chat-ufc-166-preview-bellator-pay-per-view-and-more
Tags: Tomas Hertl   rosh hashanah   Frank Castillo   regions   heidi klum  

UK court blocks WSJ story on rate rigging

LONDON (AP) — The publisher of the Wall Street Journal pledged Friday to fight an injunction preventing publication of the names of traders who may be implicated in the rate-rigging case involving the London interbank offered rate, or LIBOR.


Dow Jones & Co. said it had published on several of its platforms the names of about two dozen traders and brokers whom British prosecutors are expected to identify. The journal says the story noted that the list could change, and inclusion didn't mean the individuals would be charged with a crime.


"This injunction is a serious affront to press freedom," the company said in a statement. "We have been left with no choice but to remove the previously published story from WSJ.com and to withhold publication from the print edition of The Wall Street Journal Europe. However, we will continue to vigorously fight the injunction in the coming days."


The order applies to publication in England and Wales. The newspaper's article on the issue said that while the story was taken down from its website, it appeared in print editions of the newspaper published in the United States and in Asia.


British authorities routinely impose reporting restrictions to safeguard rights of defendants and to prevent the emergence of details that could derail investigations.


The order was issued on an interim basis until a court hearing at London's Southwark Crown Court next week.


LIBOR is a benchmark rate that underpins trillions of dollars in transactions all over the world. It is an average measuring how much banks expect to charge each other for loans. It is used in calculating borrowing costs of loans and investments such as bonds, auto loans and derivatives.


The scandal shook the financial world when it emerged that banks — including Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and UBS — were submitting false data to gain market advantages.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-court-blocks-wsj-story-rate-rigging-150331995--finance.html
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Friday, October 18, 2013

Commuter chaos in San Francisco area train strike

Roxanne Sanchez, left, president of Service Employees International Union Local 1021, left, speaks during a news conference on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit workers may go on strike at midnight unless management agrees to enter into arbitration to resolve a remaining issue, a union leader said Thursday. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







Roxanne Sanchez, left, president of Service Employees International Union Local 1021, left, speaks during a news conference on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit workers may go on strike at midnight unless management agrees to enter into arbitration to resolve a remaining issue, a union leader said Thursday. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







Federal mediator George Cohen, right, exits a building where contract negotiations were taking place between Bay Area Rapid Transit management and local union leaders on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit workers may go on strike at midnight unless management agrees to enter into arbitration to resolve a remaining issue, a union leader said Thursday. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







Antonette Bryant, president of Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1555, center, speaks during a news conference on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit workers may go on strike at midnight unless management agrees to enter into arbitration to resolve a remaining issue, a union leader said Thursday. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







A Bay Area Rapid Transit train leaves the station Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. A recipe for gridlock was brewing in the San Francisco Bay Area, as two of the region's major transit agencies teetered on the brink of commute-crippling strikes. While talks between the Bay Area Rapid Transit agency and its unions to avoid the second walk-off in four months were set to resume on Tuesday, workers at a major regional bus line said they would go on strike in 72 hours. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







A Bay Area Rapid Transit train arrives at a station Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, in Oakland, Calif. A recipe for gridlock was brewing in the San Francisco Bay Area, as two of the region's major transit agencies teetered on the brink of commute-crippling strikes. While talks between the Bay Area Rapid Transit agency and its unions to avoid the second walk-off in four months were set to resume on Tuesday, workers at a major regional bus line said they would go on strike in 72 hours. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)







(AP) — Commuters in the San Francisco Bay Area got up before dawn on Friday and endured heavy traffic on roadways, as workers for the region's largest transit system walked off the job for the second time in four months.

People were lined up well before 5 a.m. Friday at a Bay Area Rapid Transit train station in Walnut Creek for one of the charter buses BART was running into San Francisco. And traffic at the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge toll plaza into San Francisco and the roads leading to it was backed up for miles.

At the West Oakland BART station, a frazzled Tatiana Marriott raced to board a free charter bus to San Francisco shortly after 6 a.m. She had to be at work by 7 a.m.

"I probably should've gotten up a half-hour earlier," Marriott, 21, a seamstress, said, conceding that she would be late for work. "I just want BART and the unions to figure it out. I just want to get to work."

Other alternatives to BART include ferries and Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District buses.

"It's very frustrating," said Mary Nelson, a retail worker, as she waited for a ferry in Oakland. "I feel like they should be able to come to an agreement. I don't understand why they're holding a lot of hardworking people hostage."

The walkout began at midnight Thursday, the culmination of six months of on-again, off-again talks that fell apart. BART and the unions came "extremely close" to agreement on economic, health care and pension issues, but the parties were far apart on work rule issues, said Roxanne Sanchez, president of Service Employees International Union Local 1021.

The impasse came after a marathon negotiating session with the participation of federal mediators.

About 400,000 riders take BART every weekday on the nation's fifth-largest commuter rail system. The system carries passengers from the farthest reaches of the densely populated eastern suburbs to San Francisco International Airport across the bay.

SEIU said it was fighting to prevent BART from changing employees' fixed work schedules. Some employees work four-day, 10-hour shifts while others work five-day, eight-hour shifts. Union officials said BART wanted to schedule people as they saw fit.

BART officials say work rules refer to past practices that require approval from unions and management to change. The rules make it difficult to implement technological changes or add extra service on holidays because of a special event, the agency says.

Sanchez said SEIU and the Amalgamated Transit Union suggested taking the remaining issues to arbitration but management refused.

BART General Manager Grace Crunican countered that the agency needed to alter some of those rules to run the system efficiently. She said BART also needed to control costs to help pay for new rail cars and other improvements.

"We are not going to agree to something we can't afford. We have to protect the aging system for our workers and the public," Crunican said.

She urged the union leaders to let their members vote on management's offer by Oct. 27.

A four-day strike in July saw commuters lining up early in the morning for BART's charter buses and ferries across the bay, and enduring heavy rush-hour traffic.

The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency said it has developed plans to help people to get around, including providing two expanded carpool locations.

The key issues during most of the talks had been salaries and worker contributions to their health and pension plans.

Talks began in April, three months before the June 30 contract expirations. The unions initially asked for 23.2 percent in raises over three years. BART countered with a four-year contract with 1 percent raises contingent on the agency meeting economic goals.

The unions contended that members made $100 million in concessions when they agreed to a deal in 2009 as BART faced a $310 million deficit. And they said they wanted their members to get their share of a $125 million operating surplus produced through increased ridership.

On Sunday, BART negotiators presented a final offer that includes an annual 3 percent raise over four years and requires workers to contribute 4 percent toward their pension and 9.5 percent toward medical benefits.

The value of BART's proposal is $57 million, BART spokeswoman Alicia Trost said.

Workers represented by the two unions, including more than 2,300 mechanics, custodians, station agents, train operators and clerical staff, now average about $71,000 in base salary and $11,000 in overtime annually, the transit agency said. BART workers currently pay $92 a month for health care and contribute nothing toward their pensions.

____

Associated Press writer Haven Daley contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-18-BART%20Strike/id-8792b77af80e418fa67022879165887d
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Gallo Research Center announces new round of awards for $20m US Army-funded research program

Gallo Research Center announces new round of awards for $20m US Army-funded research program


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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

18-Oct-2013



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Contact: Peter Farley
peter.farley@ucsf.edu
415-502-6397
University of California - San Francisco






The UCSF-affiliated Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center has issued a second round of grants under its U.S. Army-funded research program intended to accelerate the discovery and development of new medications to treat alcohol and substance abuse in the context of post-traumatic stress and combat injury.


The program, known as the Institute for Molecular Neuroscience (IMN), relies on the expertise of a team of national experts who are unaffiliated with grant applicants to conduct an independent peer-review process.


The second round of pilot research grants will support a broad range of projects to investigate potential new treatments for substance abuse, traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress. The total funding for this round of awards is $1.25 million. Together with the $3.7 million awarded in round one, the IMN has to date awarded approximately $5 million in proof-of-principle grants.


The IMN Program represents an important new strategy for combating substance abuse and related post-traumatic stress or other combat injuries, said John A. De Luca, PhD, chairman of the board and president of the Gallo Center. These medical conditions are national security health issues. The IMN seeks to address these problems through its multidisciplinary, competitive national research program.


Grant recipients in this round of funding are:














Michael E. Charness

Boston VA Research Institute (Harvard)

$300,000

Lori A. Knackstedt

University of Florida

$306,207

Kenneth M. Lattall

Oregon Health and Science University

$370,881

Eric P. Zorilla

The Scripps Research Institute

$273,088

It is gratifying that Congress and the Defense Department have embraced the IMN Program and its new approach to accelerating the discovery of new medications to address substance abuse, post-traumatic stress and other conditions facing our military personnel and veterans, said William R. Sawyers, chief administrative officer of the IMN and the Gallo Center.


The UCSF-affiliated Gallo Research Center was selected to manage the IMN Program in recognition of its expertise in the neurobiology of addiction and in managing large research projects. The strategy of the IMN, which funds short-term pilot projects, and then selects only the most compelling for advancement, represents a new approach to the development of medications for the U.S. Military.


The IMN Program is comprised of a consortium of 18 leading research universities and research institutions across the country. Institutions which have received IMN funding previously include Columbia University, Oregon Health and Science University, the Medical University of South Carolina, Yale University, the University of Texas, Austin, the Northern California Institute for Research and Education (NCIRE) and UCSF.


Congressional appropriations for the IMN Program to date total $20.1 million, said De Luca. Later this year, the IMN will select the most promising of its first round of pilot projects to be advanced into the next stage of medications development, said Sawyers.


###

The UCSF-affiliated Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center is one of the worlds preeminent academic centers for the study of the biological basis of alcohol and substance use disorders. Gallo Center discoveries of potential molecular targets for the development of therapeutic medications are extended through preclinical and proof-of-concept clinical studies.


UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in basic biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a preeminent biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Childrens Hospital.



Follow UCSF
UCSF.edu | Facebook.com/ucsf | Twitter.com/ucsf | YouTube.com/ucsf




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Gallo Research Center announces new round of awards for $20m US Army-funded research program


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

18-Oct-2013



[


| E-mail



| Share Share

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Contact: Peter Farley
peter.farley@ucsf.edu
415-502-6397
University of California - San Francisco






The UCSF-affiliated Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center has issued a second round of grants under its U.S. Army-funded research program intended to accelerate the discovery and development of new medications to treat alcohol and substance abuse in the context of post-traumatic stress and combat injury.


The program, known as the Institute for Molecular Neuroscience (IMN), relies on the expertise of a team of national experts who are unaffiliated with grant applicants to conduct an independent peer-review process.


The second round of pilot research grants will support a broad range of projects to investigate potential new treatments for substance abuse, traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress. The total funding for this round of awards is $1.25 million. Together with the $3.7 million awarded in round one, the IMN has to date awarded approximately $5 million in proof-of-principle grants.


The IMN Program represents an important new strategy for combating substance abuse and related post-traumatic stress or other combat injuries, said John A. De Luca, PhD, chairman of the board and president of the Gallo Center. These medical conditions are national security health issues. The IMN seeks to address these problems through its multidisciplinary, competitive national research program.


Grant recipients in this round of funding are:














Michael E. Charness

Boston VA Research Institute (Harvard)

$300,000

Lori A. Knackstedt

University of Florida

$306,207

Kenneth M. Lattall

Oregon Health and Science University

$370,881

Eric P. Zorilla

The Scripps Research Institute

$273,088

It is gratifying that Congress and the Defense Department have embraced the IMN Program and its new approach to accelerating the discovery of new medications to address substance abuse, post-traumatic stress and other conditions facing our military personnel and veterans, said William R. Sawyers, chief administrative officer of the IMN and the Gallo Center.


The UCSF-affiliated Gallo Research Center was selected to manage the IMN Program in recognition of its expertise in the neurobiology of addiction and in managing large research projects. The strategy of the IMN, which funds short-term pilot projects, and then selects only the most compelling for advancement, represents a new approach to the development of medications for the U.S. Military.


The IMN Program is comprised of a consortium of 18 leading research universities and research institutions across the country. Institutions which have received IMN funding previously include Columbia University, Oregon Health and Science University, the Medical University of South Carolina, Yale University, the University of Texas, Austin, the Northern California Institute for Research and Education (NCIRE) and UCSF.


Congressional appropriations for the IMN Program to date total $20.1 million, said De Luca. Later this year, the IMN will select the most promising of its first round of pilot projects to be advanced into the next stage of medications development, said Sawyers.


###

The UCSF-affiliated Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center is one of the worlds preeminent academic centers for the study of the biological basis of alcohol and substance use disorders. Gallo Center discoveries of potential molecular targets for the development of therapeutic medications are extended through preclinical and proof-of-concept clinical studies.


UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in basic biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a preeminent biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Childrens Hospital.



Follow UCSF
UCSF.edu | Facebook.com/ucsf | Twitter.com/ucsf | YouTube.com/ucsf




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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uoc--grc101813.php
Category: blobfish   Angel Dust  

As U.S. averts default, Japan and China brace for next dollar drama


By Wayne Arnold and Leika Kihara


HONG KONG/TOKYO (Reuters) - Deal or no deal, the U.S. Congress' dance with default impressed policymakers and investors in China and Japan with just how vulnerable their own economic revival plans are to the next political tantrum on Capitol Hill.


The 11th-hour agreement on Wednesday between Congressional Republicans and Democrats to raise the limit on U.S. government borrowing and end a 16-day government shutdown also averted a default on U.S. Treasury bonds that had threatened the global economy and financial system.


But Congress gets another chance to hold U.S. creditworthiness hostage early next year ahead of a new February 7 deadline to approve a debt ceiling increase.


"We're glad a deal has been struck," said a Japanese policymaker, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "But the uncertainty will remain and it will be the same thing all over again early next year."


He and other Japanese officials say they have already developed contingency plans that include flooding Japan's banking system with cash to keep markets functioning however panicked investors become. And analysts say China, whose Communist leaders are due to hold a key policy meeting next month, may step up a push for global acceptance of its currency, the yuan or renminbi, as an alternative to the U.S. dollar in international trade.


"They might actually consider accelerating the process," said Vincent Chan, head of equity research at Credit Suisse in Hong Kong. "You strengthen the case of making the renminbi a genuine international currency, because the Americans are unreliable."


NEAR-DEBT EXPERIENCE


Perhaps no two economies outside the United States have more at stake in Washington's recurring drama than Japan and China.


Not only are they the second- and third-largest economies, but they lend Washington more money than any other single nation. China held $1.28 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities at the end of July and Japan owned $1.14 trillion. A default would likely have devastated the value of their holdings.


More than that, though, both nations have adopted policies to revitalize their own economies that to some extent rely on the improving economic appetite, stable currency and increasing indebtedness of the world's largest economy.


China is trying to deflate a dangerous credit bubble and wealth imbalances with a series of reforms that include slowly easing controls on moving money into and out of the country and allowing its currency to gently appreciate.


Analysts predict investors faced with a U.S. default would try to sell dollars for yuan, forcing China's central bank to either buy up dollars at a time when the government issuing them isn't honoring its obligations or allow a rapid increase in the yuan's value that would hurt exports and worsen the country's credit bubble.


In a sign of such market pressure, the yuan hit a record high on Friday for a fifth consecutive day against the dollar, partly as investors worried about the economic impact of the U.S. shutdown.


"If China allows the yuan to rise sharply, it could be very risky given the possible asset bubbles in the country," said He Yifeng, an economist at Hongyuan Securities in Beijing.


Japan, meanwhile, is trying to end 20 years of deflation and anemic growth with a blend of policies named for their chief proponent, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. "Abenomics" relies on reviving domestic consumption and investment in part by weakening the yen, boosting the earnings and stock prices of giant exporters like Toyota Motors Corp and Hitachi Ltd.


A U.S. default would likely prompt investors to buy yen.


"That would undoubtedly pose a headwind against Abenomics, which has much depended on a weak yen and higher share prices buoyed by the feel-good mood it has generated," said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Securities in Tokyo.


QUID PRO QUO


A default also stands to hamper a U.S. recovery and with it a nascent rebound in global exports. A default in the first quarter of 2014 would hit just as Japan's economy girds for an April sales tax increase and as China's economy loses the effects of accelerated public works spending and re-stocking of inventories.


There are no bond markets large enough to give China and Japan an alternative to U.S. Treasuries for the dollars they accumulate selling exports. So the prospect of another U.S. default drama next year is likely to lend new urgency to China's preferred solution: conducting less trade in dollars and more in renminbi.


About 18 percent of China's total trade is settled in yuan and it has registered a sharp increase this year after stagnating for most of last year.


Much of the increase has come in China's trade with economies outside the United States or the European Union, its biggest demand centers, although it accelerated plans to internationalize the currency with agreements this month with Britain and the European Central Bank.


Achieving more trade in yuan, however, means giving China's trading partners a place to invest their renminbi as easily as they invest their dollars in U.S. Treasuries now.


That means opening China further to foreign investment, a realization that could strengthen the hand of officials advocating faster reform.


"China can only be strong when its currency is a real alternative," said Chan at Credit Suisse. "But to be an alternative you have to have an open market."


(Additional reporting by Tetsuchi Kajimoto, Lisa Twaronite and Dominic Lau in TOKYO and Kevin Yao in BEIJING; Editing by Neil Fullick)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-averts-default-japan-china-brace-next-dollar-081452483--business.html
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Harry Belafonte Sues Martin Luther King, Jr. Estate


Harry Belafonte sued the estate of Martin Luther King Jr. Tuesday over the fate of three documents he tried to sell at auction.



The lawsuit in federal court in Manhattan seeks unspecified damages and a court declaration Belafonte is the rightful owner.


The documents are an outline of a Vietnam War speech by King, notes to a speech King never got to deliver in Memphis, Tenn., and a condolence letter from President Lyndon B. Johnson to King's wife after the civil rights leader's 1968 assassination.


PHOTOS: Obama, Oprah, Foxx, Honor Martin Luther King Jr.


According to the lawsuit, Belafonte was preparing to auction the items in 2008 when the estate "astonishingly" blocked it.


The lawsuit cited the close relationship between Belafonte and King, saying the pair "worked on strategies and collaborated on issues that would transform American society" while they "forged a deep and enduring personal friendship." It said King and his widow, Coretta Scott King, gave Belafonte a number of items and it noted that Coretta Scott King, who died in 2006, mentioned Belafonte in her autobiography, saying "whenever we got into trouble or when tragedy struck, Harry has always come to our aid, his generous heart wide open."


Belafonte said he delivered the documents for auction to Sotheby's Inc. in early 2008 and the auction house has held them pending a resolution of the dispute between the estate and Belafonte.


The lawsuit said Belafonte had held the Vietnam War speech outline since 1967, when King left it behind after working on it in Belafonte's apartment. It said the Memphis speech notes were found in King's suit pocket after he was assassinated. According to the lawsuit, Coretta Scott King offered the notes to Belafonte but he suggested they instead be given to one of King's longest-serving confidants. When that man died in 1979, his widow delivered the notes to Belafonte, it said.


STORY: Oliver Stone, Jamie Foxx Circling Martin Luther King Jr. Biopic for DreamWorks, Warner Bros.


The letter from Johnson was given to Belafonte by Coretta Scott King about a decade ago after she admired the collection of historic documents on a wall of his home, the lawsuit said.


The lawsuit said King frequently gave drafts and copies of his speeches, correspondence and working papers to friends and fellow civil rights activists and that his estate has made a series of "disturbing and illegitimate challenges to Dr. King's gift-giving" in recent years.


Miles J. Alexander, a lawyer for the Atlanta-based King estate, said he had not yet seen the lawsuit.


"I have no comment I can make right now," he said.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/business/~3/FkFpUhe-Shw/story01.htm
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BitLock offers a bring-your-own-bicycle approach to bike sharing

Unless you're an enraged motorist, there's plenty of good to be found in the current push for big city bike sharing programs. BitLock is certainly in keeping with the spirit of such initiatives, albeit on a much more localized scale. The proposed product is essentially a standard bike U-lock that ...


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/ZgGYgbAa6i0/
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Report: Lenovo considering acquisition of BlackBerry


China's Lenovo Group is considering a bid for struggling smartphone maker BlackBerry, according to The Wall Street Journal.


The newspaper, quoting "people familiar with the matter," said the Chinese electronics company had signed a non-disclosure agreement with BlackBerry that allows it to examine the Canadian company's financial accounts.


[ Get expert advice regarding your BYOD strategy with InfoWorld's 29-page "Mobile and BYOD Deep Dive" PDF special report. | For a quick, smart take on the news you'll be talking about, check out InfoWorld TechBrief -- subscribe today. ]


BlackBerry declined to comment directly on the report.


It said its special committee, formed to examine the future of the company, is looking at "strategic alternatives."


"We do not intend to disclose further developments with respect to the process until we approve a specific transaction or otherwise conclude the review of strategic alternatives," the company said in a statement.


BlackBerry put itself up for sale earlier this year after its BlackBerry 10 operating system and a new line of smartphones failed to gain traction with users.The company is still pushing the platform and has had some limited success, but stands fourth in the market behind Android, Apple's iOS, and Windows Phone.


There remains a large number of corporate and government customers using BlackBerry's platform, so any acquisition would likely face close scrutiny from regulators.


That scrutiny could be especially high since Lenovo is based in China. Last year, the U.S. House Intelligence Committee suggested that the use of telecom network equipment produced by two Chinese companies, ZTE and Huawei, posed a national security threat to the U.S.


Two other parties have already expressed an interest in BlackBerry.


One, Fairfax Financial Holdings, has already reached a preliminary $4.7 billion deal with BlackBerry to buy the company but it has yet to be finalized. Recently Mike Lazaridis, one of the co-founders of BlackBerry, said he is working with a group that could be interested in acquiring the company.


Martyn Williams covers mobile telecoms, Silicon Valley and general technology breaking news for The IDG News Service. Follow Martyn on Twitter at @martyn_williams. Martyn's e-mail address is martyn_williams@idg.com


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/blackberry/report-lenovo-considering-acquisition-of-blackberry-229027
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Thursday, October 17, 2013

Obama lashes Republicans as government reopens

National Park Service employees remove barricades from the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013. Barriers went down at National Park Service sites and thousands of furloughed federal workers began returning to work throughout the country Thursday after 16 days off the job because of the partial government shutdown.(AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







National Park Service employees remove barricades from the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013. Barriers went down at National Park Service sites and thousands of furloughed federal workers began returning to work throughout the country Thursday after 16 days off the job because of the partial government shutdown.(AP Photo/Susan Walsh)







President Barack Obama speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington on Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013. Lawmakers Wednesday voted to avoid a financial default and reopen the government after a 16-day partial shutdown. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)







Passengers fill up Washington Metro subway cars in Arlington, Va., Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 as workers return to their jobs after a budget fight on Capitol Hill that resulted in a partial government shutdown is resolved. (AP Photo/J. David Ake)







An audience comprising of White House staff members, stands as President Barack Obama leaves the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013, after he made a statement. Lawmakers Wednesday voted to avoid a financial default and reopen the government after a 16-day partial shutdown. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







President Barack Obama speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013. Lawmakers Wednesday voted to avoid a financial default and reopen the government after a 16-day partial shutdown. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)







(AP) — In withering day-after criticism, President Barack Obama declared Thursday that the 16-day partial government shutdown was a Republican-provoked spectacle that "encouraged our enemies" around the world.

Elsewhere in Washington, and around the country, federal employees simply streamed back to their jobs. National parks reopened. The popular panda cam at the National Zoo came back online.

But there was no letup in the political fight.

Fresh from a defeat, tea party groups and their allies renewed fundraising efforts with a promise of future assaults on Obama's health care overhaul — and a threat of more election primaries against Republican incumbents who don't stand with them.

Government spending was still front and center. Inside the Capitol, lawmakers charged with forging a post-shutdown deficit-cutting agreement in the next 60 days met privately. "We believe there is common ground," said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., chair of the Senate Budget Committee.

Privately, however, officials in both parties said the prospects for a major breakthrough were dim, given differences over taxes and spending that have proven compromise-proof throughout the current three-year era of divided government.

A few hours after Obama placed his post-midnight signature on legislation ending the long political showdown, Vice President Joe Biden was at the Environmental Protection Agency to greet returning employees. "I hope this is the end of this," he said, but he acknowledged "There's no guarantees."

That was a reference to the last-minute legislation that will fund the government only until Jan 15 and give Treasury the ability to borrow above the $16.7 trillion limit until Feb. 7 or a few weeks longer.

At the White House, Obama blended sharp criticism of Republicans with a plea for their cooperation over the remainder of the year and a call for less shrillness on both sides.

"Some of the same folks who pushed for the shutdown and threatened default claimed their actions were needed to get America back on track," he said in remarks in the State Dining Room.

"But probably nothing has done more damage to America's credibility to the world. ... It's encouraged out enemies. It's emboldened our competitors. And it's depressed our friends who look to us for steady leadership," he said.

Obama said the public is "completely fed up with Washington" and he and Congress face hard work in regaining trust. It was a reference to public opinion polls that show the nation in a sour mood — though more inclined to blame Republicans than the president and his party for the first partial government shutdown caused by politics in 17 years.

Hoping to jump-start his own stalled agenda, Obama urged lawmakers to concentrate on three items in the coming weeks: a balanced plan to reduce long-term deficits, legislation to overhaul the immigration system and passage of a farm bill.

Polling aside, Obama's party emerged from the three-week showdown in Congress united. All Democrats in Congress supported the legislation that passed Wednesday night to fund the government and raise the debt limit.

Not so of the Republicans. Eighteen GOP members in the Senate and 144 in the House opposed the legislation, while 27 in the Senate and 87 in the House supported it.

The fault line separated tea party adherents from the balance of the rank and file. And there were clear signs the split was enduring, though not widening.

In Mississippi, where GOP Sen. Thad Cochran has not yet announced if he will seek a new term in 2014, the Club for Growth and Senate Conservatives Fund were not waiting to find out. They endorsed a potential rival, Republican state Sen. Chris McDaniel, as he announced his candidacy.

The groups are among several that have played an increasingly active role in Republican primary elections in recent years, several times supporting tea party-aligned challengers. In some cases — Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, for one — they went on to victory in the fall. In more, they lost seemingly winnable races to Democrats.

One survivor of such a challenge, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said during the day that the Heritage Foundation is in danger of losing its clout as a reliable conservative think tank because of the actions of its political arm, Heritage Action.

In an interview on MSNBC, he said, "There's a real question in the minds of many Republicans now. ... Is Heritage going to go so political that it really doesn't amount to anything anymore?"

Heritage Action played an influential role in the two-week political showdown. In the days leading to the impasse, it was a strong backer of the campaign to demand that "Obamacare" be defunded in exchange for Republican approval of funding for the government.

And on Tuesday, as it was hosting a fundraiser at a high-end golf resort in Bandon, Ore., the group weighed in to oppose legislation that House Speaker John Boehner put together in hopes of retaining influence in the final negotiations over the impasse in Washington.

Yet another group, Americans for Limited Government, assailed Rep. Scott Rigell, R-Va., who voted for the legislation that reopened the government and raised the debt limit. Noting that the measure had not defunded the health care law, the group said the congressman "owns Obamacare just as much as if it had been a vote to adopt it in the first place."

In a statement issued on Wednesday in connection with his vote, Rigell said he was voting for the bill "given the lack of a viable alternative at this moment."

Other Republicans have said for weeks that the strategy of demanding Obama kill off the health care law he won from Congress never had a chance of success.

"This was a terrible idea," Sen. John McCain of Arizona said on CNN of the shutdown. He said it will not happen again when the next deadlines arrive — "I guarantee it."

But in a party divided, there were dissenters.

"Obamacare is still fully intact, out-of-control spending continues, the debt limit is raised without addressing unsustainable spending, and only vague promises are left to address these key issues," the Tea Party Express said in an online fundraising appeal.

Referring to next year's elections, the group said, "To put it plain and simple: We don't have enough conservatives in Congress to stop the irresponsible spending in Washington."

Spending will be the focus for the high-level budget negotiators who began their new assignment Thursday.

"Talking doesn't guarantee success," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, senior Democrat on the House Budget Committee, after he met with Democratic Sen. Murray, Republican House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, senior Republican on the Senate committee. But, Van Hollen added, "if you don't get together, obviously you don't move forward."

___

Associated Press writer Alan Fram contributed to this story.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-17-Budget%20Battle/id-18706b79f8d44adfbb84352a4277496b
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Amanda Setton Has a New Gig—Find Out What It Is!



By Kelly Bryant

I'm an NKOTB afficionado, makeup junkie and aspiring Real Houswife of Anywhere.




IMG_3063-EditActress Amanda Setton has a plum role on CBS’ hit fall comedy The Crazy Ones, and now the former Gossip Girl star can add another item to her resume—fashion editor.


OK! News: Camilla Luddington Shares a Must-Know Beauty Secret


Amanda will be tackling a guest editor gig for Melissa Shoes, the footwear line best known for creating sustainable, 100% recyclable, plastic styles that boast a fun, tutti frutti scent. She’ll be choosing her favorite looks from the internationally loved brand and so far Amanda is proving she has fabulous taste.


OK! News: Is Snooki Trading Jersey For Cali?


We’re totally on board with picks like Melissa’s Moon Dust booties adorned with either gold or silver spikes and the adorably girly Melissa Trippy flats accented with a faux-suede bow.


Get the scoop on all of Amanda’s Melissa recommendations here.


Which celebrity’s shoe wardrobe would you like to raid? Tell us in the comments or tweet @OKMagazine.



Source: http://okmagazine.com/dress-up/amanda-setton-has-a-new-gig-find-out-what-it-is/
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Economists: Shutdown Will Shave Half-Percent From Quarterly GDP


The government shutdown has taken a toll on the nation's economy and despite a deal that sidesteps a debt default and restarts the government (at least for a few months), growth forecasts for the last quarter of the year are being scaled back.


Economist Mark Zandi, of Moody's Analytics, has shaved his gross domestic product forecast from 2.6 percent to 2.1 percent for the last three months of the calendar year.


"If the treasury fails to make payments to Social Security recipients and Medicare providers, to bondholders, whoever that may be, it would clearly undermine (investor) confidence and would lay the foundation for the economy going back into recession," Zandi says. "And if this would extend for any length of time, into November, I think the recession we would see would be severe, on par with the Great Recession, the downturn we just went through."


Standard & Poor's says the 16-day partial shutdown cost U.S. taxpayers $24 billion. It reduced its projected fourth quarter growth from 3 percent to 2.4 percent.


The New York Times says:




"Even with the shutdown of the United States government and the threat of a default coming to an end, the cost of Congress's gridlock has already run well into the billions, economists estimate. And the total will continue to grow even after the shutdown ends, partly because of uncertainty about whether lawmakers might reach another deadlock early next year.


A complete accounting will take months once the government reopens and the Treasury resumes adding to the country's debt. But economists said that the intransigence of House Republicans would take a bite out of fourth-quarter growth, which will affect employment, business earnings and borrowing costs. The ripple from Washington will be felt around the globe."




And The Washington Post writes:




"[The] the biggest failure of the agreement, analysts say, is that it keeps the government operating for only a few months, with a new need to fund agencies and raise the debt ceiling coming in the first five weeks of 2014.


As a result, economists say, consumers and businesses are likely to hold back on spending and investment during the important holiday season, knowing that a similarly economy-shaking political showdown might be right around the corner.


'If people are afraid that the government policy brinkmanship will resurface again, and with it the risk of another shutdown or worse, they'll remain afraid to open up their checkbooks,' Standard & Poor's U.S. chief economist Beth Ann Bovino said in an analysis. 'That points to another Humbug holiday season.'"




In the Federal Reserve's monthly Beige Book report, released on Wednesday, the central bank cited fears that the shutdown would have an impact on consumer and business confidence.


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/17/236211286/economists-shutdown-will-shave-half-percent-from-quarterly-gdp?ft=1&f=1006
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iPhone 5s camera review, straight from Patagonia

iPhone 5s camera review, straight from Patagonia

The iPhone 5s improved upon the iPhone 5's camera in many ways. In our own camera comparison, I found that the iPhone 5s performed exceptionally well, especially when it came balancing colors and exposure. This was extremely evident in panorama comparisons. If you're still wanting more image samples, the guys over at Austin Mann have an amazing review of the iPhone 5s' camera posted. Not only do they have lots of sample images, they went straight to Patagonia to get them.

Much like our results, they found that the A7 processor and better IPS in the iPhone 5s handled extremely well, especially in panoramas.

As you can see, the dynamic metering significantly impacts one's ability to accurately capture the breadth of lights & darks in a single scene. Time and time again I shot panoramas ranging across darker and lighter areas and this new feature worked beautifully.

They go on to test features such as slow motion video, burst mode, and more. If you're contemplating an iPhone 5s and the camera is an important feature to you, this is definitely a review you'll want to read.

Austin Mann via Shawn Blanc

iPhone 5s

iPhone 5s
Apple's current flagship iPhone with a 4-inch in-cell display, LTE 4G, and BT 4.0 LE. New features include:

Complete review >

Released
September, 2013

Alternatives
iPhone 5c, iPhone 4s

Replacements
iPhone 6 (rumored)
Fall, 2014

Resources
Buyers guide
Help forum


    






Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/LxfZNsilaZw/story01.htm
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