Sunday, May 26, 2013

High-tech industry big immigration bill winner

WASHINGTON (AP) ? More than any other group, the high-tech industry got big wins in an immigration bill approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, thanks to a concerted lobbying effort, an ideally positioned Senate ally and relatively weak opposition.

The result amounted to a bonanza for the industry: unlimited green cards for foreigners with certain advanced U.S. degrees and a huge increase in visas for highly skilled foreign workers.

And thanks to the intervention of Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the industry succeeded in greatly curtailing controls sought by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., aimed at protecting U.S. workers.

In exchange, Hatch voted for the bill when it passed the committee, helping boost its bipartisan momentum as it heads to the Senate floor next month. For Durbin and his allies in organized labor, winning Hatch's support was a bitter victory.

"There was an agreement with the tech industry and Sen. Hatch said he wanted more, and that was what it took to get his vote," Durbin said in an interview.

The tech industry "really used Senator Hatch's vote to improve their position in the bill. I understand that," Durbin said. "But I think in fairness now, I hope the industry is satisfied and they will not push this any further."

Hatch countered: "Look, these are companies looking to contribute to the American economy in a way that benefits American workers and American-trained foreign workers."

Even before the Judiciary Committee took up the bill, industry had seen key pieces of its wish list granted. The legislation written by four Democratic and four Republican senators awards a permanent resident green card to any foreigner with a job offer in the U.S. and an advanced degree in science, technology, engineering or math from a U.S. school. It also raised the limit on the H-1B visas that go to highly skilled immigrants from 65,000 a year to as many as 180,000.

But the increase in H-1B visas was accompanied by new requirements aimed at ensuring American workers get the first shot at jobs. High-tech industry leaders say they never agreed to those provisions; Durbin insists they did.

Once the bill language became public last month and tech industry officials began absorbing the details, they turned their attention to the next front in the battle: the Senate Judiciary Committee.

They found their champion in Hatch, whose state is an increasingly significant high-tech employer. Fortuitously, he had maximum leverage. Viewed as the one Republican swing vote on the committee, he was courted by the senators who wrote it, Durbin and Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., among them.

Even as the tech industry remained largely supportive of the legislation in public, its lobbyists began working behind the scenes with Hatch's office on a series of amendments he would introduce in the committee to undo key provisions Durbin had pressed for.

The industry objected to using the unemployment rate in determining how much the number of H-1B visas could increase. One Hatch amendment would have taken the joblesss rate out of the equation.

A provision that required tech companies to offer a job to an equally qualified U.S. citizen over an H-1B holder was seen as unworkable by industry. Hatch sought to limit that requirement to companies most dependent on H-1B visas, thereby excluding many major U.S. companies.

The bill sought to bar companies from displacing a U.S. worker within 90 days of filing an application for an H-1B visa. Hatch alao sought to limit that requirement to heavy H-1B hirers.

Durbin objected to the changes. Unions, which had been largely quiet on high-tech issues while focusing on other priorities including a pathway to citizenship and a separate visa program allowing lower-skilled workers into the U.S., also spoke up in opposition.

But the AFL-CIO's opposition never was seen as a serious concern by senators or aides involved. They were confident that labor would not pull its support for a bill offering citizenship to millions over a provision affecting relatively few union workers.

Ana Avendano, assistant to the AFL-CIO president for immigration and community action, acknowledged that the union's strong support for a path to citizenship hampered its leverage on other issues.

"We have not veered from our commitment to the path to citizenship. But we are equally committed to other parts of this bill, and it makes our fight for our priorities more difficult," she said. "Tech was extremely fortunate that they found an ally on the committee that could open up a deal that had been sealed."

There was little opposition from other fronts. The companies that are the heaviest H-1B users ? and would therefore face the brunt of the restrictions under Hatch's proposals ? include technology companies based in India that have scant lobbying presence or constituency in Congress. An organization representing U.S. engineers and tech workers, IEEE-USA, has little clout compared with companies like Microsoft and Facebook.

As the Judiciary Committee began wading through amendments to the bill, Hatch was negotiating with Schumer over his amendments. Schumer wanted Hatch's vote for the bill without alienating Durbin.

Last Tuesday morning, the committee's final day working on the bill, word went out: There was a deal.

When the details emerged, Hatch had won much of what he wanted.

The unemployment rate would no longer be a factor in how high the H-1B visa cap could go up, as long as it was not 4.5 percent or above for the highly skilled professions in question. Only those companies most heavily dependent on H-1B visas would have to offer jobs to qualified U.S. citizens first, although the definition of an H-1B-dependent company was tweaked to make it slightly narrower. And the provision barring displacement of U.S. workers within 90 days was also limited in much the way Hatch sought.

The committee approved the changes, with Durbin voting "yes," though only after making clear his discomfort with the outcome.

The AFL-CIO refused to sign off on the deal, but remained supportive of the overall bill.

The tech industry pledged its support for the bill, and promised not to seek additional changes, according to Scott Corley, executive director of Compete America, which represents high-tech companies including Google, Intel and Microsoft.

In the aftermath, Durbin and labor officials accused the tech industry of taking advantage of Hatch's position on the committee in order to reopen a done deal, to the detriment of U.S. workers. But Corley insisted that the tech industry never had agreed to the restrictions in the original bill and was only trying to ensure the H-1B program would be workable for an industry that's good for American workers and the U.S. economy.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/high-tech-industry-big-immigration-bill-winner-122335675.html

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Saturday, May 25, 2013

Penguins oust Sens in five, reach Eastern finals

PITTSBURGH (AP) ? Boston or the New York Rangers? To be honest, Ottawa's Daniel Alfredsson doesn't think it matters who the Pittsburgh Penguins face in the Eastern Conference finals.

At the moment, Alfredsson believes the Penguins are a cut above.

"I think they would be the favorite to play either of those two teams," Alfredsson said. "They have skill, speed, they're well-coached and a lot of experience as well. So they're going to be a tough team to beat."

Certainly too tough for the Senators.

James Neal recorded his first playoff hat trick and Pittsburgh reached the conference finals for the first time since 2009 with a 6-2 dismantling of Ottawa on Friday night, winning the best-of-seven series in five games.

The Penguins improved to 8-3 in the postseason. Eight more wins and they'll hoist the Cup for the fourth time in franchise history.

"The further you go, the tougher it gets," Penguins defenseman Doug Murray said. "Every player starts smelling the end result."

Certainly it's wafting through the Pittsburgh dressing room after the Penguins dominated one of the NHL's best defensive teams, rolling up 22 goals in five games, including 12 in the last five periods.

"We got to our game a lot," Pittsburgh captain Sidney Crosby said. "The depth we showed, different guys chipping in. The whole way through we didn't have many lulls where we lost momentum at any point."

Kris Letang, Evgeni Malkin and Brenden Morrow also scored, and Tomas Vokoun made 29 saves as top-seeded Pittsburgh ended Ottawa's season for the third time in five years.

Milan Michalek and Kyle Turris scored for the Senators. Craig Anderson stopped 27 shots, but Ottawa simply couldn't keep up.

"I hope (the Penguins) don't bill us for the clinic," Senators coach Paul MacLean said. "But they really showed the step you have to take to continue to play in the Stanley Cup Playoffs."

The Penguins expected desperation from a team trying to extend its season for at least another 48 hours. Instead, the Senators offered only resignation.

Outskated, outshot and outworked from the opening faceoff, Ottawa put up little resistance.

"We gave them too many freebie chances and you're not going to beat a team like that when they get as many chances as they had," Senators forward Jason Spezza said.

The series win was the seventh for the Penguins under coach Dan Bylsma but the first deciding victory to come on home ice. Pittsburgh had gone 0-6 at home in potential series enders, something Bylsma's players insisted was an anomaly.

Pittsburgh made sure a trip to Canada for Game 6 wouldn't be necessary, turning Alfredsson into a prophet of sorts. The NHL's longest-tenured captain said the Senators "probably" couldn't rally to win the series after a 7-3 home loss in Game 4 on Wednesday night.

Alfredsson clarified his remarks Thursday, insisting his team still had a chance, but it didn't take long Friday night for slim to turn into none.

"We weren't able to slow them down," Alfredsson said.

Sluggish from the opening faceoff, the Senators slogged through the game's first 10 minutes, long enough for Morrow to pay immediate dividends in his return to the lineup.

The veteran forward was scratched from Game 4 in favor of rookie Beau Bennett but appeared re-energized after the night off. He got his second goal of the playoffs 6:25 into the first period, scoring the type of goal the Penguins expected when they acquired the 34-year-old from Dallas just before the trade deadline.

Pittsburgh's Matt Cooke beat a Senator to a loose puck along the halfboards then zipped a cross-ice pass to defenseman Mark Eaton. Morrow skated to the net and lifted his stick up to draw Eaton's attention. Eaton patiently waited for Morrow to get in front of the crease before throwing a puck toward the net that deflected off Morrow's skate and into the net.

The goal was held up on review and the Senators found themselves in familiar position: trailing.

Ottawa came into the game having led for just 17 minutes in regulation during the entire series, all in Game 4 before Pittsburgh buried the Senators with a four-goal outburst in the third period.

This time, the deluge came a little earlier.

Neal scored for the third time in two games when he poked in an idle rebound on the power play to put Pittsburgh up 2-0 7:38 into the second period. Letang followed with a wrist shot over Anderson's glove at the end of a 3-on-2 break to make it 3-0.

Michalek briefly made it competitive with a beautiful deke around Vokoun to pull the Senators to 3-1 with 3:48 left in the second but Malkin scored his fourth goal of the playoffs on a breakaway just before the intermission to restore the three-goal lead.

Ottawa hadn't overcome a deficit bigger than one goal in the postseason and Neal ensured there would be no meltdown by the Penguins. A pair of sizzling wrist shots in the third period gave him his first career playoff hat trick and sent the Penguins roaring into hockey's final four.

NOTES: Pittsburgh went 1 for 3 on the power play and improved to 6-0 when it outscores an opponent on special teams in the postseason. ... Ottawa is 0-6 in franchise history when it falls behind 3-1 in a series.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/penguins-oust-sens-five-reach-eastern-finals-072317236.html

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News Corp's publishing business to initiate stock buyback

By Jennifer Saba

(Reuters) - News Corp set the distribution ratios for the spinoff of its publishing business, which may start buying back stock right away.

The board of the publishing business, which will retain the News Corp name, authorized a $500 million stock repurchase program, the company said on Friday.

The stock repurchase may shed light for analysts and investors who want to know how the new News Corp will use the $2.6 billion in cash it will have when the spinoff takes place. That is expected to occur on June 28.

Chairman Rupert Murdoch and Chief Executive Officer Robert Thomson will give more details about the company at a conference on May 28.

The board of the existing News Corp has now formally approved the split-up of the company's publishing business from its entertainment operations. Current News Corp stakeholders who own four shares of Class A or Class B common stock will receive one share of new News Corp's Class A or Class B common stock.

To prevent hostile takeovers, News Corp put in place a poison pill provision for one year after the split. It will be triggered if someone acquires more than 15 percent of the stock of either company.

News Corp has a history of potential takeovers. In 2004, Liberty Media Corp's John Malone had quietly snapped up a 20 percent voting stake in the company. The move prompted Murdoch to swap his stake in DirecTV and other assets for Malone's shares in News Corp.

The new News Corp will be an independent publicly traded company.

The entertainment assets, including Fox broadcasting network, movie studio and lucrative equity stakes in pay-TV providers, will be known as 21st Century Fox.

21st Century Fox will retain no ownership interest in News Corp, the company said.

The publishing spinoff includes News Corp's newspapers including The Wall Street Journal and The Times in London, a cable network and pay-TV provider in Australia, book publisher HarperCollins and fledgling education company, Amplify.

The company named current directors Lachlan Murdoch and James Murdoch to the board of the new News Corp. New additions to the board include Thomson; Ana Paula Pessoa, a partner at Brunswick Group; John Elkann, head of Exor SpA; and Masroor Siddiqui, head of investment firm Naya Management.

At 21st Century Fox, new board directors include Delphine Arnault, deputy general manager at Christian Dior Couture; Jacques Nasser of One Equity Partners; and Robert Silberman, executive chairman of Strayer Education Inc.

Rupert Murdoch will be CEO of 21st Century Fox and chairman of both companies.

Shares of News Corp were up 0.8 percent at $33.13.

(Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Sofina Mirza-Reid, Jeffrey Benkoe and Lisa Von Ahn)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-corps-publishing-business-initiate-stock-buyback-135226288.html

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Bridge collapses in Washington state, sending cars into river

Ultimately, many of the photos and cellphone records of Trayvon Martin released online Thursday by George Zimmerman?s defense attorneys ? indicating that the slain teenager smoked marijuana, got into fights at school, and had an interest in, and perhaps access to, guns ? may be ruled inadmissible in court. But they are already making the rounds in the court of public opinion, which can influence everything from fundraising efforts to the mind-set of potential jurors in Mr. Zimmerman's murder trial.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/part-washington-state-freeway-span-collapses-river-dispatcher-030202767.html

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Friday, May 24, 2013

Video: Obama to open up on drones in crucial speech (cbsnews)

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, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/307853315?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sew a Straight Line: play it smart: Creative Writing

Good morning!? I am so happy today? to be playing it smart with Delia from Delia Creates and her series:playitsmartbuttonDelia is one of my most-admired bloggers.? She?s the real deal, total package.? She?s sweet and genuine, insanely talented, and always coming up with amazing things to do for yourself and with your children.? One of the first posts I ever remember seeing of hers was a little outdoor table and chair set made of ice she made for her boys to have a winter picnic.? I knew then I wanted to follow her blog to be inspired to do more things like that with my own children.? She?s amazing.??

So let?s play it smart!

I like my kids.? They?re pretty much some of the best people I know.? I share a lot of the things I sew for my kids, but I?m really excited today to get to share some of the fun things I do with my kids.? When Delia invited me to participate in this series, I immediately knew what I wanted to share with you all.? My boys and I had just finished working on some fun creative writing, and we had such a great time doing it. I think it?s the perfect way to work a little learning into your child?s playtime, and record some of what comes out of their amazing imaginations.

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First off, I have to give credit to my kids? Nana, Linda, who inspired this recent creative writing spree.? She is an amazing doll artist.? I wish I had pictures of some of her other creations.? They?re mind-blowing.? We recently visited her and my dad for a week.? Shortly after our return home, the boys received a package from Nana in the mail.? Inside were three friends she?d created and a note explaining who they were, with a little back story on each and a request for the boys to write more of the dolls? stories and send them back to Nana.

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Seriously, what a great idea!? And how incredibly easy would this be to do with any of your kids? favorite toys?!? Just write up a brief paragraph, or list of characteristics on the toy, and encourage your child to add to it.? You could designate a specific notebook for the stories, like Nana Linda has her Book of Dolls, and have your child record all sorts of adventures and details of their most-loved playthings.?

My boys wanted to dive into their stories of Mr. Meeps, Captain Bomback and Voodoo Daddy as soon as I?d finished reading the note to them.? Using the note as a jumping off point, all three boys spent an afternoon coming up with stories to accompany the stuffed friends.? My four year old dictated his to me, but my ten- and seven year olds were able to work independently on theirs.?

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Later that night, we had a really awesome family night where the boys shared their stories with all of us, and then called Nana Linda to read them to her over the phone. Another afternoon, they illustrated their stories.

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I need to scan their stories and illustrations for us to have copies , and then send them off to Nana Linda for her Book of Dolls.

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All three boys have been playing with the stuffed toys, and acting out the stories they wrote.? Toys inspiring story telling inspiring more play.? So fun!?

My oldest decided he wanted to add to the characters, and has started a sewing project to make a pet armadillo, Arrmy.? We haven?t had a chance to finish it up yet, but hopefully we can get to it once school is out next week.

?IMG_20130425_104515via my instagram @sewastraightline

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We haven?t done it for these stories, but another idea would be to have your kids write and perform a short skit based on the stories they come up with. When I was a little girl, I had a friend who was always organizing us to put on plays she?d written for her family. I?m hoping to have my boys do something like that this summer. I doubt they?ll need much prompting, they love to put on ?Silly Shows? frequently for each other, and love it even more when my husband and I record them so they can watch them later. Performing skits, especially ones they?ve written, is a great way to teach communication and public speaking, memorization, organization and follow-through, and working with others. And they?re fun.

If your child, or you, are having a hard time organizing thoughts and details to write the stories, you can make a simple spider diagram.? Below is one I made for my oldest son to use on another creative writing assignment.? I?m currently homeschooling him, and I had given him the assignment to come up with a superhero and then write about the character he came up with.????

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?superherospiderdiagramOver the course of a week, we worked on this particular project.? The first day, I had him fill in the bubbles on the diagram.? Then over the next few days, he?d take a couple of bubbles and write a paragraph for each using what he?d written in them the first day.? By the end of the week, all he had to do was come up with an opening paragraph and conclusion, and he had a two-page story.? He?s my kid who is very easily overwhelmed, and has a hard time because he only sees the big picture.? Telling him to write a five-paragraph assignment is enough to send him into full on panic.? But by breaking things down, he wrote the whole thing without a fuss.? It was so fun when he was done, and I was able to point out he?d written as much as he had.? He told me that day maybe he?d like to be a writer when he grows up, he had so much fun doing it and the process was so much easier than he?d been expecting.?

Kids have great imaginations. Mine are always coming up with imaginary friends and alter egos, and silly stories to go along with them. I mentioned last week my oldest son?s long-time alter ego, Jellyfishman.? We?ve had Crap, Loco, Door Nog, Mummy Guy and more over the years between the three boys.?? If your child has an alter ego or imaginary friend, encourage them to sit down and record the details that are floating around in their heads.? Illustrate the story, make a small toy or a molded-clay action figure for them to play out their writing.? Maybe even help them put together a costume they can wear to more fully act out their story through a fun little skit or just impromptu play.? Having something tangible they can hold and read and share with others reinforces your child?s ideas, and validates their creativity.? Plus, it?s just fun to see what they come up with!

Creative writing and story-telling, smart play for kids of all ages!?

Be sure to check out the rest of Delia?s Play it Smart series, including Christie?s awesome science experiment
playitsmartbutton

the end

Source: http://www.sewastraightline.com/2013/05/play-it-smart-creative-writing.html

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Motorcycling with a Message: "Neale Bayly Rides Peru"

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Motorcycle-focused television shows have developed a bit of a bad name for themselves: between stereotypical biker gang fiction ("Sons of Anarchy"), shenanigans-driven spectacle ("Nitro Circus Live"), and family custom builder soap operas ("American Chopper"), the vast majority of two wheeled entertainment seek mass appeal by choosing titillation over soul.

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Taking an altogether different approach is Neale Bayly Rides Peru, a new series hosted by-- you guessed it-- motojournalist cum philanthropist Neale Bayly. Full disclosure: I've hung out with the dude on numerous press junkets, and might even dare call the cheeky Brit my buddy. Anyway, Bayly's the kind of quick-witted, irreverent guy you'd probably enjoy having a beer (or five) with, so his show's altruistic angle-- adventure traveling with three average riders to an orphanage in a remote Peruvian outpost-- is somewhat unexpected, given his preternatural ability to have a stonking good time.

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Sure, the above trailer is a bit hype-heavy and smacks of familiar reality TV suspense conceits, but the core of the show has-- as Bayly describes it-- heart, enmeshed with healthy doses of "will-they-make-it" challenges, a la Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman's Long Way Round and Long Way Down?series.

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Neale Bayly

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"Neale Bayly Rides Peru" premieres June 9th at 9 pm ET on Speed, followed by Parts 2 and 3 on the following two Sundays (June 16 and 23), also at 9 pm ET.

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Source: Speed

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/news/auto-blog/neale-bayly-rides-peru?src=rss

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