Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Toshiba Q2 results: profit of $722 million, whole-year forecast cut by $500 million

Toshiba Q2 results profit of $722 million, wholeyear forecast cut by $500 million

Toshiba has managed to pick itself up this quarter, recording $17.8 billion in sales, making for an operating profit of $722 million over the past three months. The "social infrastructure" segments recorded a healthy profit ($518 million), while income from digital products, home appliances and electronic devices fell due lower than expected demand. Forecasts for the year have been cut for the full year by approximately $500 million to $3.26 billion, as Toshiba expects lowers sales and operating profits due to the uncertain global economic situation. Individual segments are expected to continue their distinct trends, with the social infrastructure business pulling in more while its other arms bear the brunt of the economic slowdown.

[Image credit: Wikimedia Commons]

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Toshiba Q2 results: profit of $722 million, whole-year forecast cut by $500 million originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Oct 2012 04:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/31/toshiba-q2-2012/

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Job Interviews: What Kind of Impression Does Your Company Make?

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Interviewees put a lot of effort into getting ready for their job interviews ? up to and including asking the internet for advice about their outfits. You look great, honey!

A friend got a callback for a job he applied for nine months ago with a tech start-up. He?s now happily employed elsewhere, but I encouraged him to take the phone interview anyway. After all, job interviews are a great way to get a sense for how your skills measure up in the marketplace. What transpired gave him such a shockingly bad first impression that I just had to share it.

Even in a down economy with high unemployment, all prospective employees should be treated well. Think about it: They are individuals in your field who have a high level of interest in your company. They cared enough about your company to consider working for you ? and they were a close enough fit that you invited them in for a one-on-one meeting. That makes them prime stakeholders. During the interview you have a chance to turn them into champions or detractors ? whether or not they end up being successful candidates for your open position.

Beyond your reputation in your industry, it?s also important to remember that employee engagement starts with the interview. Prospective employees will be judging your employee engagement by those crucial first interactions. What kind of message are you sending?

Back to our candidate for worst first impression of the year. This is no two-bit start-up we?re talking about. They?ve received lots of national press for their disruptive idea, the founders are famous former Google employees, and they are well-funded. We don?t expect start-ups to be fully buttoned-up ? their disorder is part of their appeal ? but we do expect a bit of care in the hiring process since first impressions are so important. One would think that these are pretty obvious interview best practices. But apparently not at every company. Does your staff miss any of these when they meet prospective hires for the first time?

Be on time

As job interviewees we expect to be judged by every facet of the first impression: what we wear, how we sound, and whether we?re prompt or not. The same standard applies to your interviewer. In this case, our interviewer was 15 minutes late for a 10-15 minute phone chat.

Sell us a little!

All interviews include a high level overview of both the company and the job, right? Any interviewer worth their salt should share at least the basics of the position ? and try to make them sound appealing. In this case, the length of the contract was unclear, because ?we?re really not sure what the end goal is.? Fair enough ? that?s a common enough situation in start-up mode, but there should be something exciting and interesting to go along with the uncertainty if you are hoping to attract top talent. How else is a potential staff member going to feel excited about working for you? Don?t forget that your prospective employees are hiring you, too.

Be prepared to share some information about the position

When questioned about the job duties (information as general as you?d find on a typical job description, like the type of degree required for the position), the interviewer claimed that she couldn?t get into details because the interviewee was not under NDA, which is kind of a conversation killer.

First of all, NDAs are practically unenforceable. Suggesting that a prospective hire sign one in order to get the most general information about what a job might entail is pretty amateur.

Second, to suggest an NDA so early in the process hints of a working environment that is cagey and full of secrets. Who wants to work somewhere where even basic information is under lock and key? The best thing about working in a start-up is how small it is: how quickly things happen, how much leeway each individual has for decision making, and how open and transparent leadership is with the staff. Asking for an NDA too early sends the message that your company is not an easy, open place to work.

Unsurprisingly, my friend did not continue on for another interview. And a start-up lost the chance to make a good impression on a key stakeholder.

Have you ever had a job interview that made you want to run? Share your story in the comments!

[Image credit: brixton, Flickr]

Scroll down to see comments.


Source: http://www.triplepundit.com/2012/10/job-interviews-employee-engagement/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Not-so-permanent permafrost: 850 billion tons of carbon stored in frozen Arctic ground could be released

ScienceDaily (Oct. 25, 2012) ? As much as 44 billion tons of nitrogen and 850 billion tons of carbon stored in arctic permafrost, or frozen ground, could be released into the environment as the region begins to thaw over the next century as a result of a warmer planet, according to a new study led by the U.S. Geological Survey. This nitrogen and carbon are likely to impact ecosystems, the atmosphere, and water resources including rivers and lakes. For context, this is roughly the amount of carbon stored in the atmosphere today.

The release of carbon and nitrogen in permafrost could exacerbate the warming phenomenon and will impact water systems on land and offshore according to USGS scientists and their domestic and international collaborators. The previously unpublished nitrogen figure is useful for scientists who are making climate predictions with computer climate models, while the carbon estimate is consistent and gives more credence to other scientific studies with similar carbon estimates.

"This study quantifies the impact on Earth's two most important chemical cycles, carbon and nitrogen, from thawing of permafrost under future climate warming scenarios," said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. "While the permafrost of the polar latitudes may seem distant and disconnected from the daily activities of most of us, its potential to alter the planet's habitability when destabilized is very real."

To generate the estimates, scientists studied how permafrost-affected soils, known as Gelisols, thaw under various climate scenarios. They found that all Gelisols are not alike: some Gelisols have soil materials that are very peaty, with lots of decaying organic matter that burns easily -- these will impart newly thawed nitrogen into the ecosystem and atmosphere. Other Gelisols have materials that are very nutrient rich -- these will impart a lot of nitrogen into the ecosystem. All Gelisols will contribute carbon dioxide and likely some methane into the atmosphere as a result of decomposition once the permafrost thaws -- and these gases will contribute to warming. What was frozen for thousands of years will enter our ecosystems and atmosphere as a new contributor.

"The scientific community researching this phenomena has made these international data available for the upcoming Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. As permafrost receives more attention, we are sharing our data and our insights to guide those models as they portray how the land, atmosphere, and ocean interact," said study lead Jennifer Harden, USGS Research Soil Scientist.

The article "Field information links permafrost carbon to physical vulnerabilities of thawing" was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by U.S. Geological Survey.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jennifer W. Harden, Charles D. Koven, Chien-Lu Ping, Gustaf Hugelius, A. David McGuire, Phillip Camill, Torre Jorgenson, Peter Kuhry, Gary J. Michaelson, Jonathan A. O'Donnell, Edward A. G. Schuur, Charles Tarnocai, Kristopher Johnson, Guido Grosse. Field information links permafrost carbon to physical vulnerabilities of thawing. Geophysical Research Letters, 2012; 39 (15) DOI: 10.1029/2012GL051958

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/GN2sxOF79r0/121025145436.htm

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Obama tackles rape comments, "fiscal cliff" on TV talk show

BURBANK, California (Reuters) - President Barack Obama suspended the levity during an interview with late-night TV talk show host Jay Leno on Wednesday to address a Republican Senate candidate's assertion that pregnancies resulting from rape are intended by God and to express confidence that Washington could soon address the looming "fiscal cliff."

"I don't know how these guys come up with these ideas. Let me make a very simple proposition: rape is rape. It is a crime," Obama said on NBC's "The Tonight Show."

"This is exactly why you don't want a bunch of politicians, mostly male, making decisions about women's healthcare."

Indiana Republican Senate candidate Richard Mourdock's comments that pregnancies caused by rape are "something God intended to happen" echoed across the U.S. media and sent ripples through political circles ahead of the November 6 election.

The Obama campaign, which enjoys leads among women voters in many election battleground states, sought swiftly to connect Mourdock with Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney. This summer Romney had to distance himself from remarks by another Republican Senate candidate, Todd Akin of Missouri, about what he called "legitimate rape."

In an interview full of jokes about marriage, Halloween and other topics, the Democratic president made a few serious comments, mostly about the hottest topic of the election: the economy.

Asked about the so-called fiscal cliff - a combination of automatic spending cuts and tax hikes set to kick in early next year - Obama said he was confident that a solution could be found before the end of the year.

"Solving this is not that hard. It requires some tough choices," Obama said, adding that some programs had to be cut and tax rates should go up for people making more than $250,000 a year.

"I hope that we can get it done by the end of this year. It just requires some compromise, which shouldn't be a dirty word."

On the economic crisis gripping the European Union, Obama said countries have been "kind of muddling along" and "they didn't respond as quickly as they could."

The United States is working with those nations to make sure they have a credible plan to maintain the unity of Europe, he added.

In a lighter moment, Obama joked about real estate mogul and TV personality Donald Trump, who recently posted a video challenging Obama to release documents about his education.

Trump has persistently questioned whether Obama, a native of Hawaii, was actually born in the United States, and Obama played off Trump's theories about his origins.

"This all dates back to when we were growing up together in Kenya," Obama joked. "We had, you know, constant run-ins on the soccer field. He wasn't very good and resented it."

(Additional reporting and writing by Lisa Lambert in Washington; Editing by Christopher Wilson)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-tackles-rape-comments-fiscal-cliff-tv-talk-034456779.html

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Five thousand dollar bond set for Mayor Joe Hernandez

Read?more: Local, Crime, San Benito Mayor Joe Hernandez, "Raspagate" Scandal, "Raspagate", Carrizalez Rucker Detention Center, Abuse of Official Capacity, Tampering with Government Property, Attorney Rey Rodriguez, Raspa Stand, San Benito City Attorney, Noe?S Tropical Sno Wiz Stand, Robertson Street, San Benito City Ordinance, San Benito, Cameron County, Rio Grande Valley, Texas

Tuesday morning San Benito Mayor Joe Hernandez turned himself into the Carrizalez-Rucker Detention Center in Olmito in connection with the ?Raspagate? scandal.?

He is charged with abuse of official capacity and tampering with government property.? A $5,000 bond was posted.

We attempted to ask the mayor about the charges as he was leaving the detention center.? Hernandez said, ?My attorney advised me not to comment,? by his side attorney Rey Rodriguez.

Hernandez is accused to have used his barbershop property to allow a mobile ?raspa? or Noe?s Tropical Sno-Wiz stand to operate, which is against city ordinance.? The property is located on Robertson Street.

According to the indictment on July 11, 2011 the mayor placed a revision in the San Benito City Commission agenda to ordinance 2385-A when he knew a conflict of interest existed.?

Back in January he spoke to Action 4 News about the allegations involving the ?raspa? stand.?

Hernandez said ? I guess I just happened to get permission from somebody to put my raspa stand next to my property.?

Hernandez told Action 4 News there are dozens of other businesses in the city doing the exact same thing.?

Tuesday neither the city attorney nor mayor would return our calls.

Source: http://www.valleycentral.com/news/story.aspx?id=816637

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Iran: Oil exports may stop if sanctions tighten

US-led oil sanctions continue to injure Iran's economy, which depends on oil export revenue, but Tehran said Tuesday it was prepared to "run the country without any oil revenues."?

"We have prepared a plan to run the country without any oil revenues," ?said Iranian oil minister Rostam Qasemi. "So far to date we haven't had any serious problems, but if the sanctions were to be renewed we would go for Plan B," he added.

Qasemi also told reporters Iran would stop exporting oil if tighter sanctions were enforced.

"If sanctions intensify we will stop exporting oil," he said to reporters in Dubai, according to Reuters.

The US and other nations implemented crippling sanctions on the Islamic Republic in an effort to curb Iran's nuclear program, which Iran says is strictly energy related. The US and other countries suspect Iran of attempting to manufacture an atomic bomb.

The sanctions have decreased Iran's oil production, but it's impossible to know by how much.

After the US election, President Obama will have to decide if the US will grant waivers to countries that still consume Iranian oil.

Iran's oil minister also told reporters, "Right now, we not only don't import but we also export some products ... there are always customers for Iranian oil."

The deadline for new waivers is December.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/iran/121023/iran-oil-exports-may-stop-sanctions-tighten

Source: http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/iran/121023/iran-oil-exports-may-stop-sanctions-tighten

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Taylor Swift's Fans Gush About Red's 'Whole New Sound'

'It combined the new music and what we're used to,' fan tells MTV News after Taylor's Times Square performance Tuesday.
By Jocelyn Vena


Taylor Swift's Red
Photo: Universal Music Group

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1696191/taylor-swift-red-fan-reactions.jhtml

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Emma v. Evans - Law Offices of Lynda L. Hinkle, LLC

The New Jersey Supreme Court is slated to hear the case of Emma v. Evans 424 N.J.Super.36 (App. Div. 2012).?this term, in which the mother, who is the Parent of Primary Residence (PPR) sought to change the children?s last name from the father?s to a hyphenated version of her birth name and the father?s name. The Superior Court permitted the change, but it was remanded on appeal (meaning they sent it back for the trial court to reconsider the facts and make a new decision with the guidance of their interpretation of the law). The Appellate court?s opinion included, in addition to the remand on fact specific issues, commentary indicating that deciding these cases the way the state had previously done, under a case called Gubernat v Deremer, 140 N.J. 120 (1995) that gives a preference in favor of the wishes of the parent of primary residence in naming issues for young children, would cause a gender bias against men since 82% of primary custodial parents are women.

There is little question among practicing family law attorneys that there can be an anti-father bias in many family law cases. Our culture has presumptions about parenting and what rights, interests and responsibilities fathers ought to be ascribed in raising children. ?In this particular case, an acrimonious divorce has given way to an acrimonious argument over the names of children too young to make the decision for themselves. Even in the event that the Supreme Court agrees that the reasoning of the Appellate Court was specious, the children have now for several years been operating under a different name, and upon remand to the trial level what judge will comfortably agree that it is in the child?s best interests to rename them AGAIN? ?The Appellate Court?s reasoning does not properly consider that the proper standard here IS the best interests of the children, not the best interests of either the father or the mother in this battle. ?The children, who are young, have had no say in this process and the Appellate Court did nothing to advance their interests or concerns in making this decision.

The argument here goes very deep into the heart of some bitter issues in family law. ?It?s really an argument about who has the power over what is in the best interests of children after a divorce. ?New Jersey has made strides in trying to equalize and remove gender considerations from parenting and custody decisions in theory, but in practice what makes family law both great and terrible is that the individual preferences, wisdom and applied common sense of the judge is the final arbiter of many important decisions of what is in the best interests of children?and in a culture full of gender biases that damage both men and women, this can be problematic.

The Parent of Primary Residence does hold more power, even in joint legal custody situations, by New Jersey law. They have the power over every day decisions, and deference is made to their input in the best interest analysis when an issue erupts between the parents over a major decision. This makes some sense, since in many cases the Parent of Primary Residence is so named because they have significantly more time with the children. This is not always true, however. Some parents share significant amounts of the duties, responsibilities and time with the children and yet whoever is so named the Parent of Primary Residence (as the Appellate Court properly pointed out, more often the mother) definitely has an advantage.

In the trenches of family law, I see fathers and mothers every day that are dedicated to their children and who feel they have no voice. I see both mothers and fathers who use the power of their relationship with the children to harm one another, both in and out of court, in wild disregard to what is truly in the best interests of their children. ?The children?s voices are silent, but for the opinion of judges which is sometimes made on the sole basis of the testimony of two arguing parents.

In Emma v. Evans, the New Jersey Supreme Court has an opportunity to carefully review what powers the Parent of Primary Residence ought to have, why and under what circumstances. It is likely they will view the question much more narrowly than that, and from a judicial perspective they are right. ?However, these questions and issues must be grappled with over the next decade as cultural circumstances demand.

Some reforms that would help to mitigate the damage caused by the power struggle of post divorce parenting would be:

Children should have the right to representation by an attorney appointed by the court in matters in which their parents disagree on significant issues that affect the outcome of their lives such as religion, name changing, significant educational and medical decisions, and other such life-changing events in which children have no voice.

Parental alienation laws exist but are rarely enforced. Parents who use their children as pawns, consistently bad mouth their ex in front of children, ?and withhold children ?from the other parent improperly (not for reasons of abuse, neglect, concerns about drug or alcohol dependency, or other such legitimate concerns) because they no longer like that other parent should face consequences and should be required to pay for relational reparation therapy between the other parent and the child.

The courts must find ways to equalize gender inequalities and eliminate presumptions about gender in making decisions about the appropriate placements for children. This includes both presumptions that damage fathers? interests, such as that fathers are non-interested or of secondary importance, and presumptions that damage mothers? interests, such as that mothers ought to bear the majority of child-rearing responsibilities. ?But most importantly, the court must begin to find ways to get more objective, effective and efficient representation of what truly is in the best interests of children when their parents can?t agree.

The New Jersey Supreme Court in Emma v. Evans has a unique opportunity to redirect the state?s thinking on gender inequity and children?s rights in post-divorce parenting power struggles. ?We hope they will lead us to a more equitable state for our children?s sake, at least in dictum if not in their decision.

- by Lynda L. Hinkle, Esq.

?

Source: http://lyndahinkle.com/emma-v-evans-the-power-struggle-of-post-divorce-parenting-an-opinion

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Small Business IT Turning to Social for Renovation over Innovation ...

October 23, 2012 by Brad Shimmin

Brad Shimmin

Brad Shimmin

Summary Bullets:
? Like their big business brethren, small businesses are flocking to enterprise social networking solutions as a means of cutting travel costs and improving productivity.
? As our research has revealed, when the rubber hits the road, however, IT buyers prioritize the improvement of existing collaboration tools such as e-mail over pie-in-the-sky ideals such as business transformation.
As an industry analyst, I find it very tempting to look for that next big thing, the innovation just over the horizon, which promises to sweep away our obviously outmoded notions of what it means to build a productive, innovative business. We analysts are not mistaken in looking to the future and imagining ?what if.? But as our recent survey of 600 SMB IT buyers has revealed, the future can actually improve the past. What if ideas like social analytics, event streams and rich profiles had been around when e-mail first found its footing in the mid-1980s? What if early messaging products like cc:Mail had the ability to recommend people and documents contextually, based upon the message being viewed?

This strange form of time travel is taking place right now, particularly within the SMB market, where IT buyers are looking to improve their existing communication and collaboration solutions ? e-mail in particular. This of course runs counter to a numerous recent prognostications concerning the imminent demise of e-mail at the hands of more modern forms of communication currently en vogue among Generation Yers. To the contrary, in our survey, when we asked IT buyers why they chose to buy an enterprise social network, we found the following:

? 62.6% sought to improve existing collaboration tools

? 22.8% looked to cut down on e-mail traffic

These were the highest and lowest rankings out of ten possible decision-makers. And I think they point to a very rational understanding of e-mail, not as a legacy system due to be replaced, but as an essential piece of collaborative infrastructure that can be modernized and made more valuable through the infusion of enterprise social networking technologies and practices.

If you?d like to hear more on this topic, you?re welcome to tune in either tomorrow (October 24th) or Thursday (October 25th) for a free webcast, which I?ll be presenting, entitled ?Enterprise Social Networking for Competitive Advantage.? I?ll expand a bit on how SMB IT buyers look at this notion of improving e-mail relative to larger corporations, and I?ll show you how they rolled out their solutions, the challenges they faced and the means they used to ensure success. And I?ll present a vendor report card for the top vendors and products in use among our survey respondents. Registered attendees will also gain access to the complete research findings for this report card, which covers nearly 20 vendors and more than 30 products. I hope to see you there.

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Source: http://itcblogs.currentanalysis.com/2012/10/23/small-business-it-turning-to-social-for-renovation-over-innovation/

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?Horses and bayonets? top Twitter moment in debate (CHART)

Here is how Monday?s debate tracked on Twitter. The peak moment was President Obama?s zinger about ?bayonets.? At 6.5 million Tweets, it was the least-tweeted about debate?.which means there are a LOT of Giants fans in the Twitterverse.

For some fact-checking on the Lies, Half-truths and Contradictions told Monday, see our breakdown here.

Source: http://blog.chron.com/txpotomac/2012/10/%E2%80%9Chorses-and-bayonets%E2%80%9D-top-twitter-moment-in-debate-chart/

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Video: Wis. shooting leaves 4 dead, including gunman

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49500805/

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Puppy Stolen During Second Home Invasion In Philadelphia

Puppy Stolen Philadelphia

A puppy was stolen during a second break-in at a Philadelphia home, according to the New York Daily News. The first time the thieves struck the home, they managed to cart away a large portion of the food contained within the refrigerator. Now the burglars have struck again, this time stealing the family?s new puppy.

In addition to the tiny dog, the thieves also made off with a 52-inch television set, a bundle of clothes, and some party favors set aside for a little boy?s upcoming birthday celebration. Mom Rachael Schortye and her family are understandably upset and disturbed by the recent turn of events.

?The TV was a gift for them,? she explained to NBC 10 Philadelphia. ?I don?t have the money to replace this stuff.?

Police explained that thieves have been entering area homes by cutting holes in window screens. After the entrance has been properly fashioned, the burglars then crawl inside and help themselves to whatever they can get their hands on. In Schortye?s case, the criminals managed to gain access to her home through the screen located on her porch.

Last Monday, thieves entered the home courtesy of the unlocked front door. The perpetrators managed to clear out the refrigerator without alerting any of the sleeping family members. One week later, thieves have struck again, this time taking a 3-month old puppy named Miss Piggy with them.

Other residents in the neighborhood has been plagued by break-ins, as well. One individual who lives two blocks away from Rachael Schortye was hospitalized after someone broke into her home on October 7. One day later, a potential burglar was chased away before the individual could gain access to the home.

As of this writing, Philadelphia police have not made any arrests in connection to the burglary. The stolen puppy has yet to be returned to the family.

Source: http://www.inquisitr.com/371268/puppy-stolen-during-second-home-invasion-in-philadelphia/

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Foreign policy could move needle in final presidential debate (CNN)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/257218420?client_source=feed&format=rss

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THE RACE: After final debate, a mad rush to home

After Monday's final debate, just two weeks remain. Expect President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney to supercharge their ground games in a last-ditch effort to close the deal with voters.

Tightening polls suggest neither one has been able to complete the job yet.

Polls often shrink just before a presidential election as undecided voters jump off the fence. And late-deciders often break for the challenger when an incumbent is running.

Debates have played an outsized role this year ? both in deciding the Republican primaries and now in bringing the presidential choice into sharper focus for many Americans.

But with no further debates and barring an unforeseen "October surprise," one of the few remaining uncertainties is the government's release of this month's jobs report just four days before the election.

The September report showed a sharp unemployment rate drop to 7.8 percent, dipping under 8 percent for the first time since the start of Obama's presidency. Was that an aberration or is the jobs picture really improving?

The October report could tell us ? although it won't matter to the many who have already voted early.

Romney joked that Obama's latest campaign slogan is "you're better off than you were four weeks ago."

Falling jobless rates helped both Presidents Ronald Reagan and Franklin D. Roosevelt win reelection, even though unemployment rates were still high ? but dropping. Momentum counts for a lot in politics.

Unemployment declined over the past year in eight of nine battleground states. Ohio added the most jobs. Wisconsin was the only battleground state to lose jobs.

But Romney's selection of Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan as his running mate is helping to make the state more competitive for Republicans.

Vice President Joe Biden campaigned Monday in Ohio and Ryan in Colorado ? both essential battlegrounds.

___

Follow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tomraum. For more AP political coverage, look for the 2012 Presidential Race in AP Mobile's Big Stories section. Also follow https://twitter.com/APcampaign and AP journalists covering the campaign: https://twitter.com/AP/ap-campaign-2

Eds: With 15 days left until Election Day, here are insights into today's highlights in U.S. politics

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/race-final-debate-mad-rush-home-154009956--election.html

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Sunday, October 21, 2012

Pope names 7 new saints, seeks to revive faith

VATICAN CITY (AP) ? Some 80,000 pilgrims in flowered lei, feathered headdresses and other traditional garb flooded St. Peter's Square on Sunday as Pope Benedict XVI added seven more saints onto the roster of Catholic role models in a bid to reinvigorate the faith in parts of the world where it's lagging.

Two of the new saints were Americans: Kateri Tekakwitha, the first Native American saint from the U.S., and Mother Marianne Cope, a 19th century Franciscan nun who cared for leprosy patients in Hawaii.

It seemed as if a third saint, Pedro Calungsod, a 17th century Filipino teenage martyr, drew the biggest crowd of all, with Rome's sizeable Filipino expat community turning out in flag-waving droves to welcome the country's second saint.

In his homily, Benedict praised each of the seven as heroic and courageous examples for the entire church, calling Cope a "shining" model for Catholics and Kateri an inspiration to indigenous faithful across North America.

"May the witness of these new saints ... speak today to the whole church, and may their intercession strengthen and sustain her in her mission to proclaim the Gospel to the whole world," he said.

The celebrations began at dawn, with Native Americans in beaded and feathered headdresses and leather-fringed tunics singing songs to Kateri to the beat of drums as the sun rose over St. Peter's Square.

Later, the crowds cheered as the pope read out the names of each of the new saints in Latin and declared that they were worthy of veneration by the entire church. Prayers were read out in Mohawk and Cebuano, the dialect of Calungsod's native Cebu province, and in English by a nun wearing a lei.

"It's so nice to see God showing all the flavors of the world," marveled Gene Caldwell, a Native American member of the Menominee reservation in Neopit, Wisconsin, who attended with his wife, Linda. "The Native Americans are enthralled" to have Kateri canonized, he said.

The canonization coincided with a Vatican meeting of the world's bishops on trying to revive Christianity in places where it's fallen by the wayside.

Several of the new saints were missionaries, making clear the pope hopes their example ? even though they lived hundreds of years ago ? will be relevant today as the Catholic Church tries to hold on to its faithful. It's a tough task as the Vatican faces competition from evangelical churches in Africa and Latin America, increasing secularization in the West and disenchantment due to the clerical sex abuse scandal in Europe and beyond.

The two American saints actually hail from roughly the same place ? what is today upstate New York ? although they lived two centuries apart.

Known as the "Lily of the Mohawks," Kateri was born in 1656 to a pagan Iroquois father and an Algonquin Christian mother. Her parents and only brother died when she was 4 during a smallpox epidemic that left her badly scarred and with impaired eyesight. She went to live with her uncle, a Mohawk, and was baptized Catholic by Jesuit missionaries. But she was ostracized and persecuted by other natives for her faith, and she died in what is now Canada when she was 24.

Speaking in English and French, in honor of Kateri's Canadian ties, Benedict noted how unusual it was in Kateri's indigenous culture for her to choose to devote herself to her Catholic faith.

"May her example help us to live where we are, loving Jesus without denying who we are," Benedict said. "Saint Kateri, protectress of Canada and the first Native American saint, we entrust you to the renewal of the faith in the first nations and in all of North America!"

Among the few people chosen to receive Communion from the pope himself was Jake Finkbonner, a 12-year-old boy of Native American descent from the western U.S. state of Washington, whose recovery from an infection of flesh-eating bacteria was deemed "miraculous" by the Vatican. The Vatican determined that Jake was cured through Kateri's intercession after his family and community invoked her in their prayers, paving the way for her canonization.

Cope is revered among many Catholics in Hawaii, where she arrived from New York in 1883 to care for leprosy patients on Kalaupapa, an isolated peninsula on Molokai Island where Hawaii governments forcibly exiled them for decades. At the time, there was widespread fear of the disfiguring disease, which can cause skin lesions, mangled fingers and toes and lead to blindness.

Cope, however, led a band of Franciscan nuns to the peninsula to care for the patients, just as Saint Damien, a Belgian priest, did in 1873. He died of the disease 16 years later and was canonized in 2009.

"At a time when little could be done for those suffering from this terrible disease, Marianne Cope showed the highest love, courage and enthusiasm," Benedict said in his homily. "She is a shining and energetic example of the best of the tradition of Catholic nursing sisters and of the spirit of her beloved St. Francis."

Two-hundred fifty pilgrims from Hawaii traveled to Rome for Mother Marianne's canonization, including nine Kalaupapa patients, as well as faithful from the local diocese.

"Marianne Cope means a great deal to us," said pilgrim Aida Javier, who traveled from Honolulu with her husband Romy for the Mass. "My husband and I feel blessed and honored to be part of this canonization."

Another pilgrim was Sharon Smith, of Syracuse, New York, whose 2005 cure from complications from pancreatitis, an inflammation of the pancreas, was declared medically inexplicable by the Vatican ? the "miracle" needed for Mother Marianne to be named a saint. In an interview last week, Smith recounted how she had fainted one day in her home, an allergic reaction to medication she was taking for a kidney transplant, and awoke in the hospital to find that doctors weren't giving her much time to live.

Her disease was eating away at her insides, causing her stomach to detach from her intestines. Doctors said they couldn't repair it. At a certain point, a nun pinned a bag of ashes and dirt from Mother Marianne's grave on her and prayed.

"I had never heard of her, but we continued to pray," Smith said. "And I just, I started getting better."

"I believe in miracles, but I don't know whether it was all the prayers, or the pinning of the relic, but I know that something worked, and I'm here for some reason," Smith said.

The Vatican's complicated saint-making procedure requires that the Vatican certify a "miracle" was performed through the intercession of the candidate ? a medically inexplicable cure that can be directly linked to the prayers offered by the faithful. One miracle is needed for beatification, a second for canonization.

The Philippines' second saint, Calungsod, was a Filipino teenager who helped Jesuit priests convert natives in Guam in the 17th century but was killed by spear-wielding villagers opposed to the missionaries' efforts to baptize their children.

"We are especially proud because he is so young," said Marianna Dieza, a 39-year-old housekeeper working in Rome who was on hand for the Mass.

The other new saints are: Jacques Berthieu, a 19th century French Jesuit who was killed by rebels in Madagascar, where he had worked as a missionary; Giovanni Battista Piamarta, an Italian who founded a religious order in 1900 and established a Catholic printing and publishing house in his native Brescia; Carmen Salles y Barangueras, a Spanish nun who founded a religious order to educate children in 1892; and Anna Schaeffer, a 19th century German lay woman who became a model for the sick and suffering after she fell into a boiler and badly burned her legs. The wounds never healed, causing her constant pain.

___

Daniela Petroff contributed.

___

Follow Nicole Winfield at www.twitter.com/nwinfield

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pope-names-7-saints-seeks-revive-faith-080236314.html

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The Best Candidate for Investors Is... (WSJ)

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Video: Matthews: ?Severely conservative? views only bring America backwards

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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Newfound Meteor Shower May Spawn Meteor Storm in 2014

While the Orionid meteor shower from Halley's Comet has our full attention this weekend, recent calculations made by meteor experts suggest there's a far-greater celestial fireworks display coming to in 2014.

In May 2014 there appears to be a reasonably good chance that a new, and very significant meteor shower, will take place. At the moment, conservative forecasts suggest anywhere from 100 to 400 meteors per hour may be seen, but the actual rate could peak much higher and potentially reach "meteor storm" levels (1,000 per hour!).

The progenitor of this possible display is comet 209P/LINEAR, a periodic comet discovered on Feb. 3, 2004, by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research project (LINEAR) using a 1-meter (39?inches) reflector telescope. The comet was given the permanent number 209P on Dec. 12, 2008.?

As comet?s go, 209P/LINEAR is small and intrinsically dim. It completes one trip around of the sun in about five years. The comet's aphelion distance (farthest point from the sun) extends out near the orbit of Jupiter and its orbit has been perturbed several times by the giant planet's gravitational pull over the past 200 years.?[Photos: Orionid Meteor Shower of 2012]

Comet's dusty tail display

Meteor experts Esko Lyytinen of Finland and Peter Jenniskens at NASA Ames Research Center were the first to announce that the Earth was on a collision course with a number of dusty debris trails shed by comet LINEAR which would cause an outburst of meteor activity. Their findings have since been independently confirmed by two meteor experts.

Jeremie Vaubaillon, of The Institut de Mecanique Celeste et de Calcul des Ephemerides in France, notes that: "So far,given the observations, we estimate a ZHR (zenithal hourly rate) of 100/hr to 400/hr, which is an excellent outburst!? But this shower can become an exceptional one. Indeed, given the current orbit of the comet, all the trails ejected between 1803 and 1924 do fall in the Earth?s path in May 2014!? As a consequence, this shower might as well be a storm."

You can see Vaubaillon's plot of Earth's path through the meteor shower stream here. The plot shows the Earth passing through a dense trail of debris on May 24, 2014.

Another reputable meteor scientist, Mikhail Maslov of Russia, has made a "very cautious" estimate for a ZHR of 100/hr, but with the disclaimer: "It is difficult to estimate expected intensity of the outburst due to the lack of past observed cases of activity from the given comet meteor shower, as well as due to very small size of the comet itself and unknown level of its past activity ? and it is very possible that real activity will turn to be much higher. Storm levels are also far from being excluded."

See Maslov?s website on the 2014 meteor shower here.

North American stargazers would be favored!

The radiant for this impending meteor shower is in the northern circumpolar constellation of Camelopardalis and the predicted date is May 24, 2014, at around 3:30 a.m. EDT (0730 GMT/UT). That means that the United States and Southern Canada will be in the best position to see whatever activity occurs, since it will be taking place in a dark sky between midnight and dawn.?

The moon will be a waning crescent, just four days from its dark "new" phase, and will be of little or no hindrance for prospective observers. As we get closer to May 2014, SPACE.com will provide more detailed information about this exciting and potentially spectacular event, so stay tuned!

But if you can't wait until 2014 for a meteor display, this weekend's Orionid meteor shower promises to offer dozens of "shooting stars" for observers with clear, dark skies. The Orionids occur each year in October when the Earth passes through a stream of dust from the famed Halley's Comet.

The Orionid meteor shower appears to radiate out of the constellation Orion, hence its name, which is currently at its highest in the night sky in the predawn hours. Look for the constellation in the southern sky late at night.

The Orionid meteor shower will peak before sunrise on Sunday (Oct. 21), but should still be an impressive show late Saturday night (Oct. 20). The peak hours to see the Orionids is between 1 a.m. and 2 a.m. local time on Sunday.

Editor's note: If you snap an amazing photo of the 2012 Orionid meteor shower and want to share it with SPACE.com, send photos, comments and location info to SPACE.com managing editor Tariq Malik at: tmalik@space.com.

Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York's Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for The New York Times and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/newfound-meteor-shower-may-spawn-meteor-storm-2014-064405082.html

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Infant lifebook help and suggestions on what to call us - Adoption ...

Hi everyone.

Quick update: We have three foster kids. One is a nearly 11 months old boy. He has been in our care for a month and 3 with another home before us. He was put into foster care by order of a judge....the judge "told" the SW to go get the baby bc Mom wasn't coming to her court hearings. Apparently the judge was working her court appts in between his trials trying to help her I assume. They pulled him for neglect....Mom wasn't taking care of her mental health which is pretty sever as far as we know. Plus, the condition of the home and the "people" coming in and out of the home. Mom and Dad have had 2 visits since we have had them and they were the first after Mom was given visit opportunities back. The parents have stop requesting them since. They have not seen our FS in two weeks. Turns out Mom was arrested again. She has court likely for the neglect at the end of this month.

His SW isn't helpful at all about timing, court information etc. etc, but our FD's therapist and SW think that he'll be here until April for sure. (The therapist knows Mom.) We are hoping to adopt him, but understand that's really long from now and being hopeful.

So to my questions...

I read a posting on here just the other day about taking lifebooks to court to help prove how well the kids have being doing in our home. How do I do that with an infant's lifebook? Should I be recording when he says his first words (which I'm doing) and that he has learned to follow when I say "no" and "come here" and finally has learned his name? How can we be preparing a lifebook in case it is used for possible TPR?

Also, with an infant that is going to be here for so long (most likely anyway) what should we be calling ourselves? By our first name, I assume vs Mom and Dad?

Thanks!

Source: http://forums.adoption.com/foster-parent-support/408984-infant-lifebook-help-suggestions-what-call-us.html

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1 dead, 4 seriously injured in Arizona bus crash (Providence Journal)

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Friday, October 19, 2012

No. 2 Oregon runs over Arizona State 43-21

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) ? Kenjon Barner ran for 143 yards and three touchdowns, Marcus Mariota added 135 yards, and No. 2 Oregon manhandled Arizona State in a 43-21 victory Thursday night.

Facing its first true road test, Oregon (7-0, 4-0 Pac-12) turned what was supposed to be a duel in the desert into another we've-seen-this-before rout by running over the Sun Devils in the first half.

The Ducks had their way against what had been the Pac-12's best defense, racing to a 36-point halftime lead and rushing for 406 yards to win their nation-leading 12th straight road game.

Arizona State (5-2, 3-1) got the start it wanted, forcing a fumble on Oregon's second play and scoring a touchdown on its first.

The Sun Devils wilted after that, unable to make up for the early loss of star defensive tackle Will Sutton or find a way to slow down the Ducks as they raced past.

Taylor Kelly, the Pac-12's pass efficiency leader, threw two interceptions that set up Oregon touchdowns in the first half and had 93 yards on 10-of-18 passing while being chased by the Ducks most of the game.

Arizona State's defense, its anchor through the first six games, allowed 454 total yards, including 48 more rushing than it had the previous four games combined.

Mariota threw for one touchdown, ran for another and had one receiving in his first true road game.

Sun Devil Stadium hadn't been the stage for a game like this for some time, maybe back to 2005, when Matt Leinart, Reggie Bush and No. 1 Southern California beat the Sun Devils 38-28.

Oregon had become the standard for success in the West, winning three straight Pac-12 titles, last season's Rose Bowl and earning a trip to the BCS title game the year before that.

The Ducks may be even better this season, again scoring points quickly and in bunches, with an improved defense to go with it.

Arizona State was one of the surprises the first half of the season, winning five games and nearly pulling out a sixth under new coach Todd Graham.

To swat down the Ducks on national TV would be a big boost to the Sun Devils, a we-have-arrived moment that would turn the spotlight full blast toward the desert.

More than 70,000 fans showed up for this highly anticipated duel, creating a "black out" with their synchronized black shirts.

The Ducks quickly made it look like they were attending a funeral in the first half.

Arizona State at least got off to a good start, recovering a fumble by Mariota on Oregon's second play, scoring 7 seconds later on a 28-yard touchdown pass from Kelly to Kevin Ozier.

The game had barely started, but that was about it for the Sun Devils, who lost Sutton for the game and possibly longer to a right knee injury on Mariota's fumble.

Two plays later, Barner ran up the middle, hesitated for a second and raced 71 yards for a touchdown.

Then it was Mariota to Bralon Addison for a 6-yard touchdown. Mariota was on the receiving end for the next score, catching a 2-yard pass from backup Bryan Bennett, who wriggled the ball forward while in the grasp of two defenders.

The first of Kelly's two interceptions, by Boseko Lokombo, set up Barner for a 1-yard scoring run. Mariota then raced up the middle 86 yards for a touchdown. Barner scored again on a 1-yard run, again after an interception, this one by Avery Patterson.

Oregon led 43-7 at halftime and had 329 yards rushing, 29 fewer than Arizona State allowed against Colorado, California, Utah and Missouri combined.

The Ducks coasted through the second half, resting many of their starters as Arizona State scored two touchdowns.

It didn't matter at that point.

Oregon had done enough during its overpowering first half to beat the Sun Devils for the eighth straight time.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-2-oregon-runs-over-arizona-state-43-042907504--spt.html

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NASA pursues atom optics to detect the imperceptible

ScienceDaily (Oct. 18, 2012) ? A team of researchers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., Stanford University in California, and AOSense, Inc., in Sunnyvale, Calif., recently won funding under the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program to advance atom-optics technologies. Some believe this emerging, highly precise measurement technology is a technological panacea for everything from measuring gravitational waves to steering submarines and airplanes.

"I've been following this technology for a decade," said Bernie Seery, a Goddard executive who was instrumental in establishing Goddard's strategic partnership with Stanford University and AOSense two years ago. "The technology has come of age and I'm delighted NASA has chosen this effort for a NIAC award," he said.

The NIAC program supports potentially revolutionary, high-risk technologies and mission concepts that could advance NASA's objectives. "With this funding and other support, we can move ahead more quickly now, Seery said, adding that the U.S. military has invested heavily in the technology to dramatically improve navigation. "It opens up a wealth of possibilities."

Although the researchers believe the technology offers great promise for a variety of space applications, including navigating around a near-Earth asteroid to measure its gravitational field and deduce its composition, so far they have focused their efforts on using Goddard and NASA Research and Development seed funding to advance sensors that could detect theoretically predicted gravitational waves.

Predicted by Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity, gravitational waves occur when massive celestial objects move and disrupt the fabric of space-time around them. By the time these waves reach Earth, they are so weak that the planet expands and contracts less than an atom in response. This makes their detection with ground-based equipment more challenging because environmental noise, like ocean tides and earthquakes, can easily swamp their faint murmurings.

Although astrophysical observations have implied their existence, no instrument or observatory, including the ground-based Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, has ever directly detected them.

Should scientists confirm their existence, they say the discovery would revolutionize astrophysics, giving them a new tool for studying everything from inspiralling black holes to the early universe before the fog of hydrogen plasma cooled to give way to the formation of atoms.

The team believes atom optics or atom interferometry holds the key to directly detecting them.

Atom interferometry works much like optical interferometry, a 200-year-old technique widely used in science and industry to obtain highly accurate measurements. It obtains these measurements by comparing light that has been split into two equal halves with a device called a beamsplitter. One beam reflects off a mirror that is fixed in place; from there, it travels to a camera or detector. The other shines through something scientists want to measure. It then reflects off a second mirror, back through the beamsplitter, and then onto a camera or detector.

Because the path that one beam travels is fixed in length and the other travels an extra distance or in some other slightly different way, the two light beams overlap and interfere when they meet up, creating an interference pattern that scientists inspect to obtain highly precise measurements.

Atom interferometry, however, hinges on quantum mechanics, the theory that describes how matter behaves at sub-microscopic scales. Just as waves of light can act like particles called photons, atoms can be cajoled into acting like waves if cooled to near absolute zero. At those frigid temperatures, which scientists achieve by firing a laser at the atom, its velocity slows to nearly zero. By firing another series of laser pulses at laser-cooled atoms, scientists put them into what they call a "superposition of states."

In other words, the atoms have different momenta permitting them to separate spatially and be manipulated to fly along different trajectories. Eventually, they cross paths and recombine at the detector -- just as in a conventional interferometer. "Atoms have a way of being in two places at once, making it analogous to light interferometry," said Mark Kasevich, a Stanford University professor and team member credited with pushing the frontiers of atom optics.

The power of atom interferometry is its precision. If the path an atom takes varies by even a picometer, an atom interferometer would be able to detect the difference. Given its atomic-level precision, "gravitational-wave detection is arguably the most compelling scientific application for this technology in space," said physicist Babak Saif, who is leading the effort at Goddard.

Since joining forces, the team has designed a powerful, narrowband fiber-optic laser system that it plans to test at one of the world's largest atom interferometers -- a 33-foot drop tower in the basement of a Stanford University physics laboratory. Close scientifically to what the team would need to detect theoretical gravitational waves, the technology would be used as the foundation for any atom-based instrument created to fly in space, Saif said.

During the test, the team will insert a cloud of neutral rubidium atoms inside the 33-foot tower. As gravity asserts a pull on the cloud and the atoms begin to fall, the team will use its new laser system to fire pulses of light to cool them. Once in the wave-like state, the atoms will encounter another round of laser pulses that allow them to separate spatially. Their trajectories then can be manipulated so that their paths cross at the detector, creating the interference pattern.

The team also is fine-tuning a gravitational-wave mission concept it has formulated. Similar to the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), the concept calls for three identically equipped spacecraft placed in a triangle-shaped configuration. Unlike LISA, however, the spacecraft would come equipped with atom interferometers and they would orbit much closer to one another -- between 500 and 5,000 kilometers apart, compared with LISA's five-million-kilometer separation. Should a gravitational wave roll past, the interferometers would be able to sense the miniscule movement.

"I believe this technology will eventually work in space," Kasevich said. "But it presents a really complicated systems challenge that goes beyond our expertise. We really want to fly in space, but how do you fit this technology onto a satellite? Having something work in space is different than the measurements we take on Earth."

That's where Goddard comes in, Saif said. "We have experience with everything except the atom part," he said, adding that AOSense already employs a team of more than 30 physicists and engineers focused on building compact, ruggedized atom-optics instruments. "We can do the systems design; we can do the laser. We're spacecraft people. What we shouldn't be doing is reinventing the atomic physics. That's our partners' forte."

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/ISYkq1wml7U/121018185947.htm

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Kehillah Housing offers affordable home for adults with developmental


Layton and Eugene Borkan hope their daughter lands a place in Kehillah Housing.

The residential complex for adults with developmental disabilities is expected to open next year at Cedar Sinai Park in Southwest Portland.

The Borkans' 36-year-old daughter Rachel, who has idiopathic mental retardation, lives in a basement apartment in their home with her 12-year-old Lhasa Apso, Schmatty. The couple, both 67, want Rachel settled somewhere safe when they're no longer around to watch over her.

"The kind of independence that (Kehillah Housing) could provide within a caring community would be the best place for her," Layton Borkan said.

Kehillah Housing will be the only facility in Multnomah County that has affordable housing and on-site programs for adults with developmental disabilities, said Peter Korchnak, online communications manager at Cedar Sinai Park.

First facility

A nonprofit organization based on Jewish values, Cedar Sinai Park offers residential and community-based care to seniors and adults with special needs. Kehillah Housing will be the organization's first residential facility specifically for adults with developmental disabilities.

However, the group's services also include Rose Schnitzer Tower in downtown Portland. Ten percent of Rose Schnitzer Tower's residents must be younger than 62 years and have a physical or mental disability, Korchnak said.

Cedar Sinai Park sstaged a groundbreaking ceremony on Sept. 28 for Kehillah Housing, which will be a two-story, green building. The $3.5 million project will employ 40 people in construction and operation.

The 14 residents of Kehillah Housing - Kehillah means "community" in Hebrew - will have access to life skills training classes such as meal planning and medication management as well as social activities, job training and other services. An on-site manager will be available when Kehillah Housing residents need help.

Cedar Sinai Park, which also features the Robison Jewish Health Center and Adult Day Services program, will provide one meal per day at Kehillah Housing.

"We're interested in creating a community, not an institution," said Cedar Sinai Park Chief Executive Officer David Fuks.

The application process for the 14 residents is not finalized, although two spots will be set aside for developmentally disabled people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.

Eugene Borkan, who is on the Kehillah Housing board, said the application process will be fair, so his family has as much chance of getting an apartment as any other family with a child who falls within a target group.

"We're invested in the concept," he said. "We're happy for the Jewish community and the community at large, but there probably will be more people seeking housing than there will be available slots."

The housing is designed for single adults with developmental disabilities who earn about 16 percent of the median family income, Korchnak said.

"Most residents will rely on Supplemental Security Income (SSI) as their sole source of income (currently $8,386 per year in Multnomah County)," he said.

Residents do not need to be Jewish to apply.

A 1998 idea

The Jewish community has been involved in Kehillah Housing from the start, sparking the idea for the development in 1998. Members of a support group for parents with adult children with disabilities at Jewish Family & Child Service (JFCS) in Portland wanted their children taken care of after they passed away or were unable to look after them. The parent group also wanted their children to live independent lives.

"It's very important to families for their parents to see (their children) live up to their full potential," said Marian Fenimore, executive director of JFCS.

Fenimore said the agency, a nonprofit social service organization, approached Cedar Sinai Park 10 to12 years ago about partnering on a development that met the community's needs. The groups have collaborated in the planning of the project, and Cedar Sinai Park now is responsible for operations and Fenimore's group will offer some support services along with other organizations.

Jewish Federation of Greater Portland awarded the Jewish social service money to conduct a feasibility study in 2000 that indicated a dearth of housing for adults with developmental disabilities, Spiegel said.

"According to our research, up to 80 percent of adults with developmental disabilities in Oregon live with their parents for lack of other options," Korchnak said.

In 2006, Cedar Sinai Park changed its mission statement to include adults with special needs.

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Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2012/10/kehillah_housing_offers_afford.html

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