Tuesday, August 13, 2013

India's factory output contracts 2.2 percent in June

New Delhi, Aug 12 (IANS) India's industrial output contracted by 2.2 percent in June due to a sharp drop in the mining and manufacturing sectors, government data showed Monday.

The latest data has dampened any hope of early economic revival.

The factory output, measured in terms of Index of Industrial Production (IIP), contracted by 1.1 percent in April-June quarter of the current financial year, according to data released by the Central Statistics Office.

Source: http://www.sify.com/finance/india-s-factory-output-contracts-2-2-percent-in-june-news-national-nimskkgchgh.html

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Outline - MA in the Visual and Material Culture of Ancient Rome

There are four taught elements, each worth 30 CATS points, in addition to a 15-20,000-word dissertation (worth 60 CATS)

Taught Elements:
  • Core Module 'Approaching Ancient Visual and Material Culture': 2-hour seminar every week in term, assessed by a 5,000 word essay on a topic of your choice.
  • Core Module in a Language: Usually Italian, to prepare yourself for your time in Rome, but you may take Ancient Greek or Latin if this is more relevant to your research needs. Assessed by a final examination and a dossier of coursework.
  • 1 optional module chosen from the following:
    Classical Epigraphy (Dr Alison Cooley, Dr Fabienne Marchand)
    Art of the Ancient World (Dr Zahra Newby)
    Ancient Numismatics (Dr Suzanne Frey-Kupper/ Prof Kevin Butcher)

(The Department reserves the right to change the detail of optional modules available.)

All these modules are taught in 9 x 2-hour small group seminars involving seminar presentations and discussion. They are assessed by a 5,000-word essay on a topic chosen in consulatation with the lecturer responsible.

  • City of Rome module, taught by the British School at Rome during April and May. The course involves a detailed programme of site visits and seminars by leading academics under the guidance of a dedicated course tutor. Accommodation is provided in the British School which has excellent library facilities. It is assessed through marks given for class participation and seminar presentation (worth 10% of total module) and a 5,000 word essay (90%), which is marked at the BSR and then moderated within the department. For further details see below. Deadline for application in 2012 is Monday 5th November.
Dissertation:
  • Dissertation of 15-20,000 words. The topic for this will be finalised during your time in Rome and is expected to build on your research there. You will begin research in Rome and be assigned a supervisor on your return to Warwick for the final months of work on the dissertation. The dissertation will be submitted in early September.
City of Rome module:

The City of Rome postgraduate course is run by the British School at Rome. It takes place in April and May of the academic year and you must formally apply for a place in the November preceeding it (applications are made via Warwick). Places are allocated according to academic merit (announced in December) and cannot by guaranteed. Should you be unsuccessful in gaining a place you would take a second optional module at Warwick and graduate with the Taught MA in Ancient Visual and Material Culture.

The course fees are paid by Warwick via fee transfer system. However, you are responsible for paying for your own travel to Rome and for accommodation expenses. Accommodation is provided by the British School at Rome at approx ?1,100 for a shared room for the 8 week course, including most meals. Some bursaries are available.

For full details see the BSR website. Deadline for application is Monday 5th November 2012.

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Source: http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/classics/admissions/courses/taughtma_visual/rome/

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BlackBerry weighs putting itself up for sale

TORONTO (AP) ? BlackBerry will consider selling itself after the long-awaited debut of its new phones failed to turn around the struggling smartphone maker.

The company said Monday that its board has formed a special committee to explore "strategic alternatives" in hopes of enhancing the company's value and boosting adoption of its BlackBerry 10 platform.

The company said its options could also include joint ventures, partnerships, or other moves.

The Canadian company's U.S-traded stock closed up 10.5 percent to $10.78 on Monday.

The BlackBerry, pioneered in 1999, had been the dominant smartphone for on-the-go business people and other consumers before Apple debuted the iPhone in 2007 and showed that phones can handle much more than email and phone calls. In the years since, BlackBerry Ltd. has since been hammered by competition from the iPhone as well as Android-based rivals.

In January, the company unveiled new phones running a revamped operating system called BlackBerry 10 designed to better compete. But its market share continues to lag. IDC said last week BlackBerry has fallen to fourth place in global smartphone sales, now trailing Microsoft. IDC estimated BlackBerry's worldwide market share at 2.9 percent. BlackBerry also warned in June of future losses.

Mike Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, said sales are getting worse even with price reductions for the new phones.

"Now they have to go to the next step of what's best for the company and shareholders to survive long term because it doesn't look promising on BlackBerry 10 sales," Walkley said.

Monday's announcement marks the second time BlackBerry has said it has hired bankers to help weigh its options since Thorsten Heins became CEO in early 2012. The company had faced numerous delays modernizing its operating system with the BlackBerry 10. During that time, it had to cut more than 5,000 jobs, and shareholder wealth declined by more than $70 billion.

Heins had said then he was not actively looking to sell BlackBerry, but wanted to be prepared given the challenging environment. He ended up focusing on launching BlackBerry 10 this year, but the company warned in June of future losses.

Analysts on Monday began guessing who might want to buy BlackBerry.

"If they can get it done they should absolutely do it. If (BlackBerry has) a future it would be better to do out of the public eye," said BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis.

Given that director Prem Watsa, the company's largest investor with a 9.9 percent stake, is resigning from BlackBerry's board "due to potential conflicts that may arise during the process," some picked him as a possible bidder.

Watsa has said that he believes BlackBerry can turn itself around, but that it might take three to five years. He's the founder of insurance company Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. and is one of Canada's best-known investors. "I continue to be a strong supporter of the company, the board and management as they move forward during this process, and Fairfax Financial has no current intention of selling its shares," Watsa said in a statement issued by BlackBerry.

Gillis said Watsa, partnered with some financial backers like pension funds, could try to buy BlackBerry. Walkley rejected that idea, saying if Watsa were interested, he would have tried to buy BlackBerry before now.

Technology companies like Apple, Google or Microsoft would not be interested because they already have their own mobile platforms, Gillis said. "Anyone who is a player in the space has taken a sniff and moved on. Now you've got financials."

Jefferies anaylst Peter Misek, however, said South Korea's Samsung could be interested in buying BlackBerry because Google has launched a new phone of its own from its Motorola division, the Moto X. In its quest for an independent operating system for its phones, adding BlackBerry's capabilities would be far easier than developing a system from scratch, Misek said.

There has also been speculation that the PC maker Lenovo or telecommunications equipment maker Huawei, both based in China, were interested in BlackBerry. But Gillis also said he doesn't see Canadian or U.S. regulators allowing BlackBerry to be owned by a Chinese company.

Major clients like the U.S. Department of Defense would abandon BlackBerry if it was bought by a Chinese company, Gillis said. "Its core reputation for security would fall apart really fast."

The strategic review will be headed by Timothy Dattels, who joined BlackBerry's board last year and is a senior partner at TPG Capital, one of the world's largest private equity firms. Gillis noted that TPG passed on participating in taking computer maker Dell private due to uncertainty of the PC business but said the firm could be interested in BlackBerry. BlackBerry has just over $3 billion in cash and no debt. The market capitalization is $5.7 billion.

BlackBerry said in its release that there can be no assurance that the exploration process will result in any transaction and declined further comment unless and until its board approves a specific sale or concludes a review of strategic alternatives.

JP Morgan Chase & Co. is serving as its financial adviser and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and Torys LLP are legal advisers.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/apdefault/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-08-12-BlackBerry/id-2f47d936ce764905bd9967701f364fd8

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Washington DC Weather: Very warm and humid

Very muggy today but a cold front will change everything.

Today:
Mix Clouds/Sun, Very Humid, Stray Storm
Highs: Upper 80s
Wind: SW 5-10 mph
Overnight:
Partly Cloudy, Shower or Storm Possible
Lows: Upper 60s to Mid 70s
Wind: SW 3-5 mph
Tomorrow:
Limited Sun, 60% Chance Scattered T?Showers, Possibly Strong
Highs: Mid 80s
Wind: WSW 5-10 mph

It will ve another very warm and humid day...the early morning fog gave us an early morning clue. Temperatures will climb into the upper 80s and higher humidity levels will make it feeel even warmer. Isolated showers and thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and again this evening. The warm and muggy conditions will continue tomorrow until a cold front arrives late in the day. ?Ahead of the front, showers and thunderstorms are likely tomorrow. Some may be heavy, a few severe.

By Wednesday, cooler and less humid air will filter into the area. It will be much more pleasant to be outdoors. Our forecast calls for partly cloudy, cooler and less humid conditions on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday with daily highs in the lower 80s.?Pretty nice?for the middle of August

Source: http://www.wjla.com/blogs/weather/2013/08/washington-dc-weather-muggy-start-to-the-week-19555.html

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This Abandoned House Unfolds Into a Theater For 100

This Abandoned House Unfolds Into a Theater For 100

This red-sided house, rotting on a quiet street of York, Alabama, was once a symbol of the town?s struggle with blight. But over the past two years, with the help of the citizens who invited him there, artist Matthew Mazzotta has disassembled the abandoned structure and rebuilt it?as a tiny home that unfolds into an open-air theater. It?s like the circle of life, for architecture.

Read more...


    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/iQOCMgs2nUw/this-abandoned-house-unfolds-into-a-theater-for-100-1109606551

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Gun laws and race in Florida: Numbers show we aren't safe

"The simple fact is, we are not safe. Not in our homes, not anywhere ? People now cannot walk on their streets without fear ?"

Interestingly, these are not the words of those around the nation protesting the verdict in the trial of George Zimmerman who was found not guilty of murdering Florida teen Trayvon Martin.

Instead, this fearful warning came from Jeb Bush during his gubernatorial campaign in the early 1990s. Once in office, Bush made good, pushing through two laws that now stand at the heart of the Zimmerman controversy.

The first, "stand your ground," extends the Castle Doctrine of no duty to retreat beyond the home and into public space. The second, which has received less media attention, is the 10-20-Life mandatory minimum for gun crimes. The implementation of these two cornerstone Bush-era statutes has not only left Floridians less safe but also demonstrates disturbing racial disparities.

The 1999 10-20-Life law set mandatory-minimum sentences for any convicted felon who carried, displayed or used a gun during the course of a crime. Designed to serve as sentence enhancements, not even a judge's discretion can lessen the sentence.

In cases of simple possession, those convicted receive a mandatory-minimum sentence of three years; those who use a gun receive 10 years; those who fire a gun receive 20 years; and if a victim was injured or killed by a gun during a crime, 25 years to life in prison. By receiving a not-guilty verdict, Zimmerman also escaped the mandatory-minimum requirement.

This surprised few familiar with the criminal-justice system in Florida, however. The Florida Department of Corrections found in a study from 1999-2007 that blacks made up the largest percentage, 64 percent, convicted under the law. Whites, by contrast, accounted for only 33 percent of the convictions.

The second cornerstone law was "stand your ground." Although the Zimmerman defense team elected not to pursue a "stand your ground" hearing, the law did play a pivotal role as the instructions read to the jury clearly stipulated that Zimmerman had "no duty to retreat."

We should place Trayvon's shooting within the statistical context that homicide rates are higher in "stand your ground" states. Texas A&M researchers found the rates of murder and non-negligent manslaughter increased by 8 percent in more than 20 "stand your ground" states ? which has meant 600 more homicides annually.

Following Florida's passage of "stand your ground" in 2005, "justifiable" homicides tripled from an average of 12 a year from 2000-2004 to an average of 35 a year from 2005-10.

Moreover, in a nationwide study of "justified" homicides from 2005-10, John Roman of the Urban Institute's Justice Policy Center found that where the victim and shooter are strangers and not law enforcement, fewer than 3 percent of black-on-white homicides were deemed justified. When the shooter is white, however, and the victim is black, the rate leaps to 36 percent in "stand your ground" states.

As the historian Yohuru Williams, of Fairfield University, has observed, today's rates of racially disproportionate, "justified" homicides are falsely clothed in the language of legal color blindness, when instead they should serve as a sobering historical reminder that many in the Jim Crow generation also considered the lynching of African-Americans as "justified."

The story of Jacksonville resident Marissa Alexander casts more doubt on the "color-blind" nature of these gun laws. In 2010, Alexander fired a warning shot in the air after she claimed her husband threatened her. In 2012, however, a judge rejected her plea to be immune from prosecution under "stand your ground."

Instead, Alexander received a 20-year sentence under the mandatory minimum. Her story and Trayvon's killing are sobering reminders that the "we" Bush spoke of during his political campaigns was far from inclusive. The fate of two shooters, one white Hispanic and one black, illustrate the problematic nature of such laws in a state where gun violence is "justified" self-protection for whites, and yet imbued with a deep fear of armed blacks.

As long as these Bush-era gun laws continue to criminalize and endanger the lives of black people, these cases should remind the nation that African-Americans in Florida and in other "stand your ground" states are "not safe, not in our homes, not anywhere."

Robert Chase is an assistant professor in the Department of History at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, N.Y.

Source: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/opinion/os-ed-stand-ground-10-20-life-081313-20130812,0,4467484.story?track=rss

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Patriot Coal and Union Reach a Deal on Cutbacks

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Monday, August 12, 2013
The nation?s biggest miners? Union and Patriot Coal have reached a potential settlement that the Union claimed eases the severity of wage and benefits cuts a bankruptcy judge had allowed the company to impose. ? ? ? ? ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/13/business/patriot-coal-and-union-reach-a-deal-on-cutbacks.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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