New Bookmarks
Year 2005 Quarter 2: April 1 - June 30 Additions to
Bob
Jensen's Bookmarks
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Tidbits Directory ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Click here to
search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter --- Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Choose a Date
Below for Additions to the Bookmarks File
June 30, 2005 June 15, 2005
May 31, 2005 May 12, 2005
April 30, 2005 April 12, 2005
June 30, 2005
Bob
Jensen's New Bookmarks on June 30, 2005
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Fraud Updates
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about
the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
Real time
meter of the U.S. cost of the war in Iraq ---
http://www.costofwar.com/
For Quotations/Tidbits of the Week go to
Quotations and Tidbits
For Humor of the Week go to Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
My communications on
"Hypocrisy in Academia and the Media" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm
My “Evil
Empire” essay ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
Kim Zetter. "ID
Theft: What You Need to Know," Wired News, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,68032,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_8
What should I do if my
wallet or purse is lost or stolen?
Immediately contact all three
credit reporting agencies -- Equifax, Experian and
TransUnion -- and have them place a fraud alert on your
account. This means that companies issuing new credit
accounts in your name will have to call you to obtain
permission first. The alert will last for 90 days only.
You can extend the alert to seven years, but only if
you've been a victim of identity theft and can provide a
police report.
Equifax: 1.800.525.6285
Experian: 1.888.397.3742
TransUnion: 1.800.680.7289
In addition to contacting the
credit reporting agencies, you should file a police
report if your property was stolen. Close any accounts
that you think may have been compromised by the loss or
theft. The FTC provides
more information and a chart
to tick off steps you should take.
What can I do to
prevent myself from becoming a victim?
There isn't really anything you
can do to prevent identity theft. As long as Social
Security numbers are used for purposes other than Social
Security, you are at risk of having your identity stolen
any time someone has access to documents that carry your
number and other personal data. There are, however,
things you can do to lower your risk of becoming a
victim.
- Review monthly financial
statements carefully for fraudulent activity.
- Request a free copy of
your credit report from a credit-reporting agency
once a year to examine it for fraudulent activity. A
new law requiring credit reporting agencies to
provide a free annual report goes into effect
nationwide in September. Until then, it's in effect
only in western and Midwestern states. The credit
report will show who requested access to your credit
record. Look for requests from companies you haven't
done business with and tell credit-reporting
agencies if you see credit accounts that you didn't
open or debts you didn't incur. Check to see that
your name and address are correct.
- Don't give your Social
Security number to any business that doesn't really
need it.
- Cross shred sensitive
documents. Thieves have been known to piece together
strips of paper that are shredded only once.
Cross-shredders double-shred documents.
- Shred pre-approved
credit-card offers before tossing them in the
garbage.
- Don't store sensitive
personal information, such as bank account numbers
and passwords, on home computers or handheld
devices.
- Install a firewall and
anti-virus software on your computer and keep the
virus definitions up to date to prevent viruses and
Trojan horses from infecting your computer and
feeding personal information back to hackers.
- Don't fall for phishing
scams. Phishing occurs when someone sends you an
e-mail purporting to be from your bank or other
company you do business with and requesting you to
update your account information.
- Use specially designed
software programs to clean data from your computer
before you sell or discard it. Simply deleting files
will not remove data from the memory.
- Don't carry any documents
in your wallet that have your Social Security number
on them, including your medical card or military ID,
on days when you don't need the card.
- Opt-out when your bank or
other financial institution requests permission to
share information about you with other businesses.
- Close all credit-card
accounts except the one or two that you really need.
- If you are an identity
theft victim and live in one of ten states,
including California, Colorado, Louisiana, Maine,
Texas, Vermont or Washington, consider placing a
"freeze" on your credit report so that no one can
access it without your permission. More than 20
additional states are considering passing similar
legislation. Creditors need to look at your report
before granting you credit. By freezing your report,
it will prevent unauthorized people from seeing your
personal data and it will prevent creditors from
opening a new credit account in your name for an
impostor. Some states only let victims of identity
theft freeze their records. Other states allow
anyone to freeze their record. The State Public
Interest Research Groups maintains
a list of states with
freeze laws.
Bob Jensen's guides on how to
report fraud ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
Bob Jensen's helpers on identity
theft ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft
Bob Jensen's threads on computing
and network security ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
"Adobe PDF Patch
Plugs Data Leak Threat," by Brian Krebs, The Washington Post, June 20,
2005 ---
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2005/06/adobe_pdf_patch.html?referrer=email
According to Adobe, the latest version gets rid of
a fairly serious security flaw. By convincing a target to download a
specially crafted PDF document, attackers could "discover the existence of
local files," -- i.e., read documents on the victim's computer. Adobe says
that threat is minimized because the attacker would have to know the exact
name and location of the files he was searching for to be able to leverage
the security flaw.
Anyway, you can update using the automatic updater
bundled with Adobe, or
visit
Adobe's download site to install the fix manually.
Adobe says it is working on a fix for Mac users. If any Mac users are
concerned about this vulnerability,
this page has instructions on how to disable
Javascript in Adobe.
By the way, if you browse the Web using
Mozilla's Firefox Web browser
and have always had trouble loading PDF documents, you
might consider following
the advice here to fix the problem. Just scroll
down to the question in the FAQ that reads "Why do Adobe pdf files load
slowly in Windows?" For the longest time I put off researching a tweak for
this problem. Mozilla says it's because Adobe Reader for Windows
loads lots of unused plugins on startup.
Bob Jensen's helpers for
computing and networking security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
"Homeowners Should Know Tax Implications,"
AccountingWeb, June 17,
2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=101013
Homeowners enjoy generally favorable tax
treatment when they sell their principal residence, thanks to a 1997 tax
code change that eliminates taxes on capital gains. But experts say that
not everyone wins under the law, and it pays to be savvy about all the
tax implications associated with buying and selling. Now that some
economists are warning of a possible cooling in housing prices, it's as
important as ever to be aware of what the laws mean to you.
First, some statistics. According to the
National Association of Realtors, the national median price for an
existing home was $206,000 in April, which was up 15 percent from April
2004, when it was $179,000, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The top economist for mortgage giant Fannie
Mae, David Berson, predicts housing prices rising by about 6.5 to 7
percent in 2005, but there is “a chance” of regional declines in homes
sales in 2006, he said at a press briefing.
Now for the tax rules. Some tips from Tom
Herman of the Wall Street Journal:
Generally, if you sell your primary residence,
and you've lived there for at least two years, you don't have to pay
taxes on up to $500,000 of gain if you're married and filing jointly. An
example provided by the Journal: Suppose you and your spouse bought your
first home in the mid-1990s, have lived in it ever since, and your cost
basis is $100,000. This year, you sell it for $600,000. Because of the
1997 law, you typically wouldn't owe any capital-gains taxes because
your profit didn't exceed the maximum exclusion of $500,000. (The
maximum exclusion for single taxpayers is $250,000.)
Using the same home as an example, if you sell
for $1.1 million, no capital-gains taxes would be owned on $500,000 of
your $1 million gain, but the other $500,000 would be taxable.
Most people benefit from the 1997 rules, but
some don't because they can no longer defer capital gains by buying
another primary residence. The so-called “rollover” provision was
eliminated when the 1997 rules were put in place.
If you are a single person who netted a gain of
$400,000 in a house sale and bought a new home right away for more than
that, say $600,000, you could have deferred capital gains under the old
rules because the gains were “rolled over” into the new home. Current
law says you would owe capital gains tax on $150,000 - the amount over
the maximum $250,000 single-person exclusion.
Some tax planners urge clients who are looking
at gains that are above the exclusion amount to consider also selling
assets that have lost money. Martin Nissenbaum, national director of
personal income-tax planning at Ernst & Young in New York, told the
Journal that the losses can then be used to offset some or all of the
gain on home sale.
Conferring with a tax professional is always a
good idea, considering the huge range of tax incentives, credits and
rules out there.
Bob Jensen's tax helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
Taxes for online purchases will soon be "unavoidable"
Online shoppers could be forgiven for overlooking a
California court ruling last month that might end the tax-free joyride
they've been enjoying on the information superhighway.The appeals
court ruling said megabookstore Borders Inc. had to pay $167,000 in
taxes that it owed based on Internet sales from 1998 and 1999. The reasons
are complicated and experts disagree on the results. Looking at the big
picture, however, it appears that somehow, sometime in the future, most
people who buy things online will pay taxes.
Robert MacMillan, "An Unavoidable Tax," The Washington Post, June 20,
2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/UnavoidableTax
Online Pricing
University of Pennsylvania professor Joseph
Turow calls this "the evolution of a culture of suspicion. From airlines
to supermarkets, from banks to Web sites, American consumers increasingly
believe they are being spied on and manipulated. But they continue to trade
in the marketplace because they feel powerless to do anything about it." His
article on the subject
appeared in Sunday's Outlook section.
Joseph Turow, "Online Pricing," The Washington Post, June 20, 2005
---
http://snipurl.com/OnlinePricing
Tax-friendly versus Tax-unfriendly states in 2005 ---
http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/08/real_estate/tax_friendly/index.htm
Top honors go to the tax-friendly states of Alaska, New Hampshire and
Delaware.
Most unfriendly? Maine, New York, D.C.
Every year, the Tax Foundation
measures the total tax bill for each state, creating a
list of the most – and least – tax-friendly states in
the country.
See the full list
here. And see
more state rankings based on
income tax, sales tax, property tax and tax breaks for
retirees.
In creating its rankings, the
Tax Foundation measures as a percentage of per capita
income what residents pay in income, property, sales and
other personal taxes levied at the state and local
levels. It also factors in the portion of business taxes
passed along to state residents through higher prices,
lower wages or lower profits.
The Tax Foundation is a
nonpartisan, nonprofit policy research group that
advocates, among other things, tax simplification.
|
|
Academic Career Advice From Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution, June 20,
2005 ---
http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2005/06/simple_career_a.html
Simple advice for academic publishing
Last week I gave a talk on career and publishing
advice to a cross-disciplinary audience of graduate
students. Here were my major points:
1. You can improve your time
management. Do you want to or not?
2. Get something done every day. Few academics
fail from not getting enough done each day. Many
fail from living many days with zero output.
3. Figure out what is your core required
achievement at this point in time -- writing,
building a data set, whatever -- and do it first
thing in the day no matter what. I am not the kind
of cultural relativist who thinks that many people
work best late at night.
4. Buy a book of stamps and use it. You would be
amazed how many people write pieces but never submit
and thus never learn how to publish.
5. The returns to quality are higher than you
think, and they are rising rapidly. Lower-tier
journals and presses are becoming worth less and
less. Often it is the author certifying the
lower-tier journal, rather than vice versa.
6. If you get careless, sloppy, or downright
outrageous referee reports, it is probably your
fault. You didn't give the editor or referees
enough incentive to care about your piece. So
respond to such reports constructively with a plan
for self-improvement, don't blame the messenger,
even when the messenger stinks. Your piece probably
stinks too.
7. Start now. Recall the tombstone epitaph "It
is later than you think."
Darth Sidious got this one right.
8. Care about what you are doing. This is
ultimately your best ally.
Here is
a good article on academic book publishing and
how it is changing.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on June 19,
2005 at 06:36 AM in
Education |
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Simple advice for academic publishing:
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Issues in Extension
From Tyler Cowen at Marginal Revolution comes this
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Although it is aimed at grad students, it is sound
advice for everyone. I just need to follow it more
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Simple Advice for Academic Publishing: A Protege
Talks Back from EconLog
Graduate students would do well to heed Tyler
Cowen's career advice. His council definitely helped
me during my early years...
[Read More]
A new illustration of "satisficing" (a term phrased by early
researchers of decision theory at Carnegie Mellon University)
"So-So Results With Technology," by Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed,
June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/17/tech
College administrators love to
boast about how their institutions are national leaders
in all kinds of ways. But when it comes to technology
systems used for colleges’ many business operations,
very few people claim to be leaders. Most, in fact, seem
to think their systems aren’t so great.
That is the chief finding of a
survey
of college chief information officials, released
Thursday by Educause.
The CIOs were asked, in a
series of business categories, whether the systems they
had in place put their institutions at risk, were
adequate, satisfactory, make their colleges leaders, or
made the colleges exemplars. Generally, “adequate” and
“satisfactory” were the most common answers, with
relatively few institutions seeming to feel that their
systems were at a point of crisis, and even fewer
feeling that their systems were anything to rave about.
For instance, in the category
of “developing budgets,” 61.6 percent of those
responding said that their systems were adequate, while
9.7 percent said that they were at risk. Only 1.4
percent thought that their institutions had systems that
were exemplars. Similarly, in the category of “tracking
budgets and expenditures,” only 1.4 percent saw their
institutions as exemplars while 11.3 percent saw their
institutions as being at risk.
The study organizes business
functions into various categories. In the area of human
resources, functional areas that received relatively
high “at risk” ratings included managing positions (18.2
percent), recording time and attendance (16.7 percent),
managing compensation (14.1 percent) and recruiting
employees (12.9 percent). An area with atypically strong
satisfaction is payroll, where only 1.3 percent saw
their institutions at risk and 8.4 percent saw their
institutions as leaders.
In student services, areas with
high “at risk” responses included auditing degree
completion (20.6 percent) and managing events (20.2
percent). Maintaining grades was a function with high
satisfaction, with only 0.7 percent seeing their
institutions at risk, and 15.9 percent seeing their
institutions as leaders.
Grants management is a category
causing consistently high worry among CIOs. More than 20
percent considered their systems “at risk” in the areas
of tracking proposals, preparing proposals and reporting
time spent on grants management.
So why are so many colleges
less than thrilled with the technology that they pay so
much to buy, license and maintain? The Educause report
attributes this to concept of “satisficing,” which holds
that decision makers in certain situations will decide
to stick with technology is “good enough” because the
costs of getting optimal performance are too high.
Continued in article
Evaluating Faculty at the University of Tennessee
Jan R. Williams, "Faculty Evaluation: Lessons Learned," AACSB eNewsline
---
http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-4/Issue-6/dc-janwilliams.asp
From The Scout Report on June 23, 2005
Adium X 0.82
http://www.adiumx.com/
For better or worse, more people enjoy copious
amounts of online messaging while at work, at play, or just out at the
beach. Adium X 0.82 is one such device that enables this particular form
of social communication. It happens to function as a multiple protocol
instant-messaging client, and it includes support for AIM, Yahoo, MSN,
Trepia, and Napster. With the program, users can manage multiple
conversations and also maintain a presence on multiple services
simultaneously. This version of Adium is compatible with Mac OS X 10.2.7
or later.
Bob Jensen's threads on resources are
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review, June 24,
2005
TITLE: SEC Weighs a 'Big Three' World
REPORTERS: Deborah Solomon and Diya Gullapalli
DATE: Jun 22, 2005
PAGE: C1 LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111939468387765810,00.html
TOPICS: Auditing, Auditing Services, Auditor Changes, Auditor Independence,
Personal Taxation, Public Accounting, Regulation, Sarbanes-Oxley Act,
Securities and Exchange Commission, Tax Shelters
SUMMARY: As described in the related article, Justice Department
officials are debating whether to seek an indictment of KPMG from a criminal
case built by Federal prosecutors for the firm's sale of what the
prosecutors consider to be abusive tax shelters. The Justice Department is
concerned about competitiveness of the audit profession if KPMG collapses as
did Arthur Andersen and only three large firms are left. As described in the
main article covered in this review, the SEC already is considering relaxing
some of the auditor independence rules because of the difficulties in
implementing them with only four large firm auditing most publicly-traded
companies.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What auditor independence rules have been implemented as a result of
Sarbanes-Oxley? Hint: to help answer this question, you may refer to the
AICPA's summary of this Act available at http://www.aicpa.org/info/sarbanes_oxley_summary.htm
2.) What steps has the SEC taken to relax some standards for firms
switching auditors? When did the SEC institute these allowances? What
trade-offs do you think the commissioners considered in making these
allowances to relax the standards?
3.) Why is the SEC again concerned about what actions it may have to take
to allow for firms to switch auditors?
4.) What is the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board? What role can
this entity play in establishing public policy because of the concerns with
the shrinking number of large public accounting firms?
5.) Refer to the related article. For what reason might KPMG LLP be
indicted? Does this potential indictment have anything to do with the audit
services provided by this firm?
6.) How is the potential indictment affecting all aspects of KPMG's
practice regardless of the culpability of the firm's audit partners? How do
you think this potential indictment affects all firm employees' perception
of the need for control procedures over the firms' activities in all
practice areas?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
--- RELATED ARTICLE ---
TITLE: KPMG Faces Indictment Risk on Tax Shelters
REPORTER: John. R. Wilke
PAGE: A1
ISSUE: Jun 16, 2005
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111888827431261200,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on the two faces of KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#KPMG
Bob Jensen's threads on the future of auditing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#FutureOfAuditing
German proverb: "Whose bread I eat his song I sing."
"Auditors: Too Few to Fail," by Joseph Nocera, The New York Times,
June 25, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/25/business/25nocera.html
Yet the word now seems to be that the Justice
Department will probably not indict the firm (KPMG).
This is partly because KPMG has belatedly apologized, admitted the tax
shelters were "unlawful," and cut adrift its former rising stars (and
tried to shift the blame for the shelters to them). And it is working to
come up with a deal with prosecutors that, however painful, will fall
short of the death penalty.
But it's also because the government is afraid
of further shrinking the number of major accounting firms. Remember when
people used to say that the major money center banks were "too big to
fail"- meaning that if they ever got in real trouble the government
would have to somehow ensure their survival? It appears that with only
four big accounting firms left, down from eight 16 years ago, there are
now "too few to fail." How pathetic is that?
. . .
"What infuriates me about the accounting firms
is the enormous power they have," said Howard Shilit, president of the
Center for Financial Research and Analysis. "You just can't compel them
to do things they ought to do. And the fewer firms there are, the more
concentrated their power." To my mind, the biggest problem is the
hardest to change - that accounting firms are paid by the same
managements they are auditing. Nobody really thinks about changing this
practice mainly because it's been that way forever. But, "it's the
elephant in the room," said Alice Schroeder, a former staff member at
the Financial Accounting Standards Board who later became a Wall Street
analyst. In the memorable phrase of Warren E. Buffett's great friend and
the vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, Charles T. Munger - quoting a
German proverb: "Whose bread I eat his song I sing."
June 26, 2005 reply from Denny Beresford
[dberesford@TERRY.UGA.EDU]
Bob,
The author of this article has set up a "Forum"
in which readers are encouraged to report their reactions to the issue
of so few major accounting firms. It's at
www.nytimes.com/business/columns . There are
some very interesting comments already recorded - some of the
suggestions might actually make sense.
Denny
The forum link is at
http://forums.nytimes.com/top/opinion/readersopinions/forums/businesstechnology/accounting/index.html
June 27, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Some of the forum's replies are from nut cases.
But there are some good suggestions, particularly the suggestion about
pooling of audit fees. This would not eliminate the risk of a bad
audit, but it does take the fee negotiation risk out of the picture.
The mako59 reply from a PwC CPA is well written.
Bob Jensen's threads on the two faces of KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#KPMG
Bob Jensen's threads on the future of auditing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#FutureOfAuditing
From Jim Mahar's Blog on June 27, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Jay Ritter finds that shareholder returns are negatively correlated with
economic growth.
In his words:
"... does economic growth benefit stockholders?
This article argues on both theoretical and empirical grounds that the
answer is no. Empirically, there is a cross-sectional correlation of
–0.37 for the compounded real return on equities and the compounded
growth rate of real per capita GDP for 16 countries over the 1900-2002
period."
"I am not arguing that economic growth is bad. There is ample evidence
that people who live in countries with higher incomes have longer life
spans, lower infant mortality, etc. Real wages are higher. But although
consumers and workers may benefit from economic growth, the owners of
capital do not necessarily benefit."
Later:
"This article argues that limited historical data
on stock returns are not a constraint, since these data are irrelevant
for estimating future returns, whether in emerging markets or developed
countries. This point has been made before, although possibly not as
explicitly, in Fama and French (2002) and Siegel (2002), among other
places. Of greater originality, this article argues that not only is the
past irrelevant, but to a large extent knowledge of the future real
growth rate for an economy is also irrelevant."
"I argue that only three pieces of information are needed for estimating
future equity returns. The first is the current P/E ratio, although
earnings must be smoothed to adjust for business cycle fluctuations. The
second is the fraction of corporate profits that will be paid out to
shareholders via share repurchases and dividends, rather than accruing
to managers or blockholders when corporate governance problems exist.
The third is the probability of catastrophic loss, i.e., the chance that
“normal” profits are a biased measure of expected profits because of
“default” due to hyperinflation, revolution, nuclear war, etc. This
third point is the
survivorship bias issue, applied to the future."
A few other highlights:
"I believe that the large stock price effects
associated with recessions are partly due to higher risk aversion at the
bottom of a recession, but also due partly to an irrational
overreaction."
A nice summary of XBRL ---
http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=11168
Talking Points XBRL IS WINNING SUPPORTERS
XBRL is an XML-based standard for analysis,
exchange and reporting of financially oriented business information. Its
initial use will be to meet mandates for financial reporting and
analysis. Any organization that is familiar with XML is already much of
the way there. Everything that needs to be done can be done outside the
ERP and GL systems in middleware. The SEC is fueling interest in XBRL,
although its official position is pointedly neutral. Using XBRL is
voluntary, but that may change soon.
Meet the new addition to the XML family, XBRL.
eXensible Business Reporting Language represents another derivative of
XML and promises to streamline the integration of business reports and
automate the corresponding financial and business analysis. Although the
initial uses of XBRL focus on financial reports that must be sent to the
FDIC and SEC, it can be applied to almost any category of business
reporting. XBRL also is being used in Europe to meet financial reporting
mandates.
“XBRL represents a significant advance, but
don’t expect it to change things overnight,” says Robert Kugel, VP and
research director at Ventana Research. To start, XBRL “makes it easier
to deal with financial numbers,” he explains. Therefore, the initial
uses of XBRL for mandated financial reporting and the accompanying
analysis of those reports represent only the beginning of what the
technology can do.
Ultimately, “XBRL has the potential to unleash
a lot of creativity,” Kugel says. For example, it would enable the
business analysis of the parties in a supply chain or the state of
particular markets. These types of analysis are not practical today, as
data has to be culled manually, normalized and re-input into
spreadsheets or other analytical applications.
Adopting XBRL, however, shouldn’t be a burden.
Any organization that is familiar with XML is already much of the way
there. All that’s needed is to pick up the appropriate industry-specific
schema and adopt some simple maintenance tools. Companies don’t even
have to change their existing financial applications. “Virtually
everything that needs to be done can be done outside the ERP and GL
systems in middleware,” says Walter Hamscher, vice chair, XBRL
International. And it doesn’t have to be expensive. “How much you spend
depends on how much value you want,” Hamscher continues.
It’s not only the data Simply put, XBRL is an
XML-based standard for the analysis, exchange and reporting of
financially oriented business information. XBRL International (
www.XBRL.org ) freely licenses the XBRL
standard and framework as a specification for structuring and
representing information in business reports so it may be extracted and
processed automatically by XBRL-aware applications.
Specifically, XBRL defines data-formatting
conventions and vocabularies for marking up and describing business
report data, such as sales or net assets. Like XML, it is tag based.
Descriptions in the form of tags or labels are attached to the various
pieces of business data. These tags describe the particular piece of
data in terms of an agreed-upon vocabulary. That vocabulary is referred
to as an XBRL taxonomy, the specific schema tags. The taxonomy performs
a function similar to the document type definition used with XML,
although it is more detailed than the DTD.
XBRL then employs XML’s XML Linking Language (XLink)
capability to further extend the taxonomy definitions. “XBRL is not just
data but semantics—about what the data means. XLink is how you specify
the semantics,” says Hugh Wallis, an independent consultant for XBRL
International.
Once the organization has the appropriate
taxonomy, it can enable its reports for XBRL. From there, organizations
can more easily use and share data from the reports within the
organization and between organizations. XBRL-aware applications can take
advantage of the high level of specificity and self-describing nature of
the tags to automatically process the information for purposes of
reporting and analysis. XBRL is independent of any hardware platform,
software operating system, programming language or accounting standard,
as noted in a recent PricewaterhouseCoopers report titled “XBRL:
Improving Business Reporting Through Standardization.”
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL
Low long-term interest rates persist even in the face of powerful
factors that should drive them up: why?
"The 'Conundrum' Explained," by Roger C. Altman, The Wall Street
Journal, June 21, 2005; Page A16 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111931620512664812,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
The first part of this article is not quoted here
What is uncommon is for developing regions to
run positive international accounts. Historically, they have grown
rapidly and consumed foreign capital on a net basis. But today the
opposite is true. Remarkably, Latin America, China, Africa and the
Middle East are in surplus, as shown in the chart nearby.
By definition, such unprecedented foreign
liquidity must be invested, and more of such capital usually flows into
fixed income instruments than equities. Believe it or not, comparable
rates outside the U.S. are even lower than ours. Economic growth is so
anemic in Europe and Japan, for example, that the yield on Japan's
10-year government bond is 1.3%, while the 10-year German Bund is at
3.3%. At the margin, therefore, the highest returns are realized on
American bonds. That is why this excess foreign liquidity has nowhere
else to go.
This is the one aspect of our overall financial
picture which is both new and carries significant impact. On that basis,
it is a more likely explanation of the conundrum than either a misguided
bond market or an incorrect consensus economic forecast.
The final question is whether this
unprecedented phenomenon will continue to suppress U.S. long-term
interest rates. The logical answer is yes -- but not indefinitely. At
some point, foreign investors' holdings of dollar-based assets will rise
beyond any prudent standard of diversification. They will then, at
minimum, stop adding to these holdings. If nothing else changes in the
interim, that will end our interest-rate honeymoon.
Summary of Tidbits from June 15-June 29, 2005
The entire Tidbits Directory is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsdirectory.htm
Music: Games People Play
---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/house.htm
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
If you're going to borrow money to buy a home, better to borrow in Florida
than North Dakota.
While the media tends to quote national averages on
mortgage rates, in fact rates vary widely from state to state -- over time and
on any given day. On June 8, the highest rate on a 30-year-fixed mortgage was
6.79% in West Virginia, and the lowest rate was 4.89% in Georgia, according to
Bankrate.com.
Steven Sloan, "Want a Good Mortgage Rate? It May Depend on Your State," The
Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2005; Page D2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111816047825153017,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Advice about mortgages from Jane Bryant Quinn, Newsweek, June 6,
2005, Page 41.
For great tips on mortgages, visit Guttentag's (a professor at Wharton)
site ---
http://www.mtgprofessor.com/
For quick quotes, check eloan.com ---
http://www.eloan.com/
Ignore the "cheap loan" promises in your e-mail . .
. Spammers merely collect names to sell to lenders --- or worse, pry for
personal information.
Bob Jensen's threads on Internet frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on investing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#Finance
Help for victims of investment
fraud ---
http://www.helpforinvestors.org/
Think you're a victim of investment fraud? Want to
check out your financial adviser? Need to report identity theft? A new
streamlined Web site from the Alliance for Investor Education,
www.helpforinvestors.org, provides direct links
to the right government agencies, regulators, and trade groups.
Lauren Young, "A Tool for Investors in Distress: The new Web site from the
Alliance for Investor Education offers lots of help, including for those who may
have been duped," Business Week, June 15, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/jun2005/nf20050615_4371_db035.htm?chan=tc
Bob Jensen's helpers for victims of various types of fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
Sharing Professor of the Week
Trinity University's Geology Professor Glenn Kroeger ---
http://www.trinity.edu/gkroeger/
Specialties: Geophysics,
Seismology, Remote Sensing, Geographic Information Systems
Courses:
Projects:
Women Often Discover Their Business Talent After Kids Are Raised
In addition, it often takes women longer to believe in
themselves enough to seek jobs in which they wield power. "By their 40s and 50s,
after observing a few male bosses, women finally begin to say to themselves,
'These guys aren't any smarter than I am,' " says Ms. Liswood. Yet few big
corporations are flexible enough to take advantage of women's life cycles by,
for example, giving them flexible schedules when they are raising young children
and promotion opportunities when they are older. A lot of middle-age women have
found their own solution: launching their own businesses. There are 10.6 million
women-owned businesses in the U.S., employing 19.1 million people, and two out
of three of the new businesses being launched are women-owned. "A lot of these
women have worked for big corporations, but at 40 or so when a lot are still
stuck in middle management they start thinking, 'I can have more influence and a
bigger piece of the pie doing it on my own,' " says Marsha Firestone, founder of
the Women Presidents' Organization. The average age of the group's members is
49.
Carol Hymowitz, "Women Often Discover Their Business Talent After Kids Are
Raised," The Wall Street Journal, June 14, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111870963411258724,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Mind on Fire
A new biography of Empson has come out recently (or
rather, the first of two volumes of a biography, which might just be overdoing
it). So that might be part of what’s stirred up the memory. But there is also
the fact that I’m at the early stage of writing a book — and at the other
extreme from anything resembling the monotonous lucidity Burke describes. Each
fact, each idea, every dim intuition seems to connect to all the others. At
times this is exciting. The brain blazes; hours of concentration prove
effortless. And sometimes it’s a pain in the ass. The problem being that you
cannot write a book out of a pure intuition of possible linkages. (Not unless
you are a novelist, or the author of one of those fictions of cohesive personal
identity known as a memoir.) For a work of nonfiction prose, you have to gather
a lot of information — and then control it. So it’s disconcerting to find that
your ideas are swarming without a center They keep running to the bookshelves to
prove themselves. And if it turns out — as I’m finding it often does — that no
scholar has written anything on some topic absolutely essential to the project,
then a kind of panicky weariness kicks in. It feels like being obliged to
reinvent the wheel without knowing what a circle looks like.
Scott McLemee, "Mind on Fire," Inside Higher Ed, June 14 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/14/mclemee
Stem Cells Get Brainy
Scientists induce certain mice brain cells, which are
also stem cells, to multiply. The discovery could spell good news for fighting
diseases like Parkinson's and Huntington's.
"Stem Cells Get Brainy," Wired News, June 13, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,67843,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_9
Staying divorced is bad for health
Coining a new term, "marital biography," to denote
your entire lifelong experience with marriage, divorce and remarriage, the
study's co-authors, University of Chicago's Linda Waite and Duke University's
Mary Elizabeth Hughes, will show how that history has a cumulative effect on
health. Indeed, your marital biography has an even bigger impact on long-term
health than whether you are married or divorced at any particular time. The
longer you spend in a divorced or widowed state, the higher the likelihood of
heart or lung disease, cancer, high blood pressure, diabetes, stroke and
difficulties with mobility, such as walking or climbing stairs, according to the
2005 study of 8,652 people age 51 to 61. The research, funded by the National
Institute on Aging, will be presented a week from today at a Dallas conference
of the Coalition for Marriage, Family and Couples Education, a Washington, D.C.,
nonprofit organization.
"Another Argument for Marriage: How Divorce Can Put Your Health at Risk," The
Wall Street Journal, June 16, 2005, Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111888263357661063,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Testing a disposable camcorder
Disposable photo cameras have been around for years and
have carved out a healthy niche in the overall photography market. But nobody
has come up with a disposable video camcorder -- until now. Last week, a
one-time-use, digital video camera made by Pure Digital Technologies Inc. of San
Francisco went on sale in selected drugstores across the nation. Although it's
not yet available in Northern California, pending a regional distribution deal,
the company hopes to have it on local store shelves by the end of the summer.
Retailing for $30, the pocket-sized digital camcorder stores only 20 minutes'
worth of video and won't produce the same quality shots that owners of more
expensive digital camcorders have come to expect.
Benny Evangelista, "Testing out disposable camcorder: S.F. firm makes it easy to
e-mail clips made on tiny device," San Francisco Chronicle, June
13, 2005 ---
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/06/13/BUGO0D5OEG28.DTL&type=tech
Advocate for women in higher education
On June 1, Judith S. White became the
new executive director of
Higher Education Resource Services,
known by the acronym HERS, which runs a series of leadership
development programs for women in academe.White, who held a
series of administrative positions at Duke University, recently
discussed her new position and the outlook for women in higher
education.
"Advocate for Women," Inside Higher Ed, June 16, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/06/16/white
Are you a prosumer?
Prosumers are passionate about the technology they use
for their creative pursuits. ''How much time do you have?" replies Dr. Cyril
Mazansky, when asked about his equipment. Mazansky is a radiologist who is also
a devoted nature photographer. ''I could happily talk to you about this all
afternoon." For technology companies, they're tough customers, more
sophisticated and demanding than garden-variety consumers, but less experienced
and free-spending than professionals. The word ''prosumer" was coined in 1979 by
the futurist Alvin Toffler. Initially, it referred to an individual who would be
involved in designing the things she purchased (a mash-up of the words
''producer" and ''consumer.") These days, the term more often refers to a
segment of users midway between consumers and professionals. This kind of
prosumer doesn't necessarily earn money by making music, videos, or photos, but
is still willing to invest in more serious hardware and software than the
typical dabbler, and spend more time using it.
Scott Kirsner, "Are you a prosumer? Take this hand quiz," Boston Globe,
June 13, 2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/business/globe/articles/2005/06/13/are_you_a_prosumer_take_this_hand_quiz/
Are you a prosumer?
The Maryland Department of Health says results from a
federally funded study underscore the need for targeted HIV prevention programs,
especially for gay black men in Baltimore. The research was a risk-behavior
study of Baltimore-area men who have sex with men. The study reveals that
one-third the participants are infected with the disease. But half of the
African American study participants are HIV positive. The study was conducted by
the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health between June 2004 and April.
"Study Finds High Rates of HIV Among Gay Men," ABC News, June 15, 2005
---
http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0605/236070.html
Phonic Ear's Front Row Active Learning System
FDA Clears Phonic Ear Active Learning Systems for
Classroom Communication Phonic Ear has received U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) clearance for medical devices that improve speech
intelligibility in classrooms for hearing impaired and normal-hearing children
and adolescents. This clearance designates Phonic Ear's Front Row Active
Learning Systems design, which clarifies and amplifies a teachers' voice, as a
safe and effective means for improving speech intelligibility. Phonic Ear is the
first and only wireless technology developer to earn this clearance for these
systems. In addition to improving children's listening skills, Front Row Active
Learning Systems could also be a relief on school budgets: U.S. schools may lose
as much as $2.5 billion annually in sick leave for teachers with vocal problems,
according to the University of Iowa's National Center for Voice and Speech.
T.H.E. Newsletter on June 15, 2005
For the full story, visit
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050608/85337.html?.v=1
Search the deep (password protected) Web
Yahoo said it had begun testing a service that lets
users search information on password-protected subscription sites such as
LexisNexis, known as the "deep Web." The move comes as Yahoo (YHOO), Google (GOOG)
and Ask Jeeves (ASKJ) rush to give web searchers access to ever more information
-- from books, blogs and scholarly journals to news, products, images and video.
The service, called Yahoo Search
Subscriptions, allows users to search multiple online subscription content
sources and the web from a single search box. Users can see content from the
sites they subscribe to, while nonsubscribers have the option of paying to see
it. Content providers, for their part, get access to the vast audience of web
search users.
"Surfing the Deep Web," Wired News, June 16, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,67883,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_7
Also see
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050616/165255.html?.v=1
The Yahoo Search Subscriptions site is at
http://search.yahoo.com/subscriptions
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Online Classroom Network Set to Launch Major Chinese-English
LanguageLearning Portal
ePALS Classroom Exchange will launch a Chinese-English
Language and Learning Portal in September, enabling its 103,000 global
classrooms to connect with Chinese schools in a teacher-supervised online
environment. Initially, the focus will be on matching 60,000 English-speaking
K-12 schools in the US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland with
schools in China, allowing Chinese teachers and students to practice English
language skills while English-speaking schools learn Chinese history, culture,
and, language. The company will integrate basic Chinese and English language
learning tools into the portal as well as the company's proprietary school-safe,
multi-lingual e-mail and eMentoring tools to power the collaboration between
classrooms.
T.H.E. Newsletter on June 15, 2005
For the full story, visit
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050606/nym103.html?.v=10
Upgrading teacher education programs
Teacher preparation programs have taken a pounding
in recent years, from legislators concerned about the dearth of teachers being
produced and policy makers who view the programs as outdated and unwilling to
change. In 1998, the last time Congress adopted legislation to extend the Higher
Education Act, teachers’ colleges (and, in turn, higher education leaders viewed
as defending them) were lambasted by Rep. George Miller (D-Cal.), who accused
them of turning out poorly prepared instructors. He won passage of new standards
and reporting requirements designed to measure, state by state, the quality of
teacher training programs. Seeking to shift from defense to offense, the
American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education played host Wednesday to
a briefing on Capitol Hill aimed at “debunking the myths” that teacher training
programs are lethargic and ("We’re not grandma’s normal school any more,” as the
group’s executive director, Sharon P. Robinson, put it) and at introducing its
own draft legislation for the teacher training portion of the Higher Education
Act, which Congress is once again preparing to renew.
Doug Lederman, "Playing Offense, Not Defense," Inside Higher Ed, June 16,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/16/teachered
Upgrading 'community' college learning
For many low-income students, the gateway to higher
education is through urban community colleges. But many of those students have
received poor educations in high school, and have a good chance of getting stuck
in remedial courses and never graduating. Some community colleges are
experimenting with new approaches to educating these students, but there are few
examples of concrete evidence of how successful those approaches are. This week,
however, a study is being released that suggests that the use of “learning
communities” can have a significant impact on the success of students who need
the most help.
Scott Jaschik, "Keeping Students Enrolled," Inside Higher Ed, June 16,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/16/cc
PLATO Orion Standards and Curriculum Integrator
Largest Idaho District Selects PLATO Orion for
Standards-Based Teaching Initiative PLATO Learning Inc. announced it has been
awarded a $454,000 agreement with Idaho's Meridian Joint School District for a
districtwide implementation of PLATO Orion Standards and Curriculum Integrator.
PLATO Orion is an integrated instructional management system that supports the
continuous improvement and data-driven decision-making processes of educational
organizations. At the district level, it helps curriculum specialists identify
standards and objectives for each grade and allows administrators to identify
gaps in standards coverage within existing materials and lesson plans. At the
building level, teachers use PLATO Orion to access, create, and use formative
assessments to identify students' strengths and weaknesses and then identify and
assign aligned resources, including PLATO Instructional Solutions, lessons
plans, textbooks, and Web sites for individualized instruction.
T.H.E. Newsletter on June 15, 2005
For the full story, visit
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050609/95097.html?.v=1
Bob Jensen's threads on the history of computer-based course management
systems are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/290wp/290wp.htm
Especially note how to unlock retail codes
I agree with most of the advice below except for advice to buy custom made shoes
if you have rather standard-made feet. Note that in some cases below I
quoted only the caption and not the text under that caption.
"Unlocking the Special Codes," The Wall Street Journal, June 14, 2005;
Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111871443117158844,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
From tuition discounts to estate planning to special codes that unlock
retail deals, here are some other techniques for saving time and money.
• Don't pay full price for a Broadway theater ticket.
Web sites to check out include
BroadwayBox.com,
TheaterMania.com and
Playbill.com.
• Focus on home renovations that
enhance resale value:
• Don't pay full price for
college
Ask for a discount. Hungry for the brightest students,
many of the country's stronger universities are actively discounting
tuition. These rebates, which can be thousands of dollars, aren't
coming from endowments or government grants. |
• The only way to lose weight is
to cut calories:
• Timing is everything
when it comes to finding cheaper airfares:
• It also is possible to get deals
online by using special retail codes:
Just go to one of the following Web sites:
naughtycodes.com,
currentcodes.com,
dealhunting.com or
discountcodes.com. Scroll down the menu to find stores, then
enter the store's discount code to complete a purchase.
Another approach is simply buying something online
and then signing up for special promotions and email alerts. Some of
these deals can be found on bargain-hunter sites such as
DealHunting.com,
ShoppersResource.com and
QuickToClick.com. |
• Consider a
living trust:
Assets in a living trust go directly to heirs
designated by the trust and avoid probate, saving you legal
expenses. If you own homes in two states and want to avoid probate
in one of the states, you can put that home in a living trust. Be
sure the cost of setting up trusts, and revising them as situations
change, doesn't exceed the legal fees and taxes you are trying to
avoid.
• Buy custom-made shoes:
For men, a leather rounded-toe Oxford
lace-up with hand-sewn welting is the most comfortable shoe there
is. That is because welting -- where a strip of material is
hand-stitched between the sole and the upper part of the shoe -- is
essential for enhancing flexibility.
It also makes the shoe easier to repair, since
cobblers can easily rip and replace, compared to ready-made shoes
with glued and molded soles directly attached to the upper. If you
can't afford custom-made shoes, buy ready-made shoes elsewhere and
bring them into the store to have welting put in. This costs about a
third of the price of a handmade pair.
• When ordering cocktails, ask for
premium tequila but don't bother with expensive vodka:
The most common way people waste money on booze is by asking
for super-high-end vodkas when ordering a mixed drink, as the subtle
qualities of ultra-premium vodka get washed out by fruity mixers.
Save the good stuff for straight-up with a twist. By contrast, the
average consumer acts like a cheapskate when it comes to ordering
tequila -- yet spending the extra money can make all the difference
in a margarita. What you want: a brand with 100% blue agave. |
Findings that led Duke to drop supplying students with iPods for course
use
"Duke Analyzes iPod Project," by Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, June
16, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/16/ipod
Among the findings:
- More than 600 students were in
courses using the iPods each semester of the academic
year that just concluded.
- Use was greatest among foreign
language and music courses, although a range of
disciplines used the devices.
- While audio playback was the
initial focus of most of those involved, students and
faculty reported the greatest interest in digital
recording.
- The effort was hurt by a lack
of systems for bulk purchases of mp3 audio content for
academic use.
- There are many “inherent
limitations” in the iPod, such as the lack of instructor
tools for combining text and audio.
- Some recordings made with the
iPod were not of high enough quality for academic use.
- The project resulted in
increased collaboration among faculty members and
technology officials at the university, and the
publicity about the project led to more collaborations
with other institutions
Bob Jensen's threads on education technologies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
New accounting curriculum at a leading accounting program in the U.S.
Professors at Kansas State University College of
Business Administration are spearheading a campaign to emphasize the importance
of ethics in business education. The call to support Uniform Accountancy Rules
5-1 and 5-2 as effort to prevent future corporate ethics scandals, has been
endorsed by more than 200 ethicists, business professionals, two conference
boards and, of course, fellow professors. “The accounting profession,
especially the large firms, see a need and have expressed support for ethics
courses as part of the accounting curriculum,” says Dann Fisher, associate
professor of accounting and the Deloitte Touche Faculty Fellow at Kansas State
University. “The resistance expressed by the academic community is what I find
disconcerting. In general, accounting faculty appear to be unwilling to change
and, at the same time, bitter that an external body would attempt to force them
to change curriculum. Regardless of the reasons, the status quo is
unacceptable.”
"Professors Call for New Accounting Curriculum Mandate," AccountingWeb,
June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100995
KPMG could face criminal charges for obstruction of justice
and the sale of abusive tax shelters
Federal prosecutors have built a
criminal case against KPMG LLP for obstruction of justice and
the sale of abusive tax shelters, igniting a debate among top
Justice Department officials over whether to seek an indictment
-- at the risk of killing one of the four remaining big
accounting firms. Federal prosecutors and KPMG's lawyers are now
locked in high-wire negotiations that could decide the fate of
the firm, according to lawyers briefed on the case. Under
unwritten Justice Department policy, companies facing possible
criminal charges often are permitted to plead their case to
higher-ups in the department. These officials are expected to
take into account the strength of evidence in the case -- the
culmination of a long-running investigation -- and any
mitigating factors, as well as broader policy issues posed by
the possible loss of the firm. A KPMG lawyer declined to
comment. The chief spokesman for the firm, George Ledwith, said
yesterday that "we have continued to cooperate fully" with
investigators. He declined to discuss any other aspect of the
case.
John R. Wilke, "KPMG Faces Indictment Risk On Tax Shelters:
Justice Officials Debate Whether to Pursue Case; Fears of
'Andersen Scenario',"
The Wall Street Journal, June
16, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111888827431261200,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
KPMG Addresses Ex-Partners Unlawful Conduct
The specter of felled Arthur Andersen
LLP hovers in federal prosecutors' calculations as they
negotiate with another accounting titan, KPMG, over sales of
dubious tax shelters. The Big Four accounting firm acknowledged
Thursday that there was unlawful conduct by some former KPMG
partners and said it takes ''full responsibility'' for the
violations as it cooperates with the Justice Department's
investigation. Deals allowing companies to avoid criminal
prosecution are becoming an increasingly attractive alternative
for the Justice Department and a clear option in the KPMG case.
Just Wednesday, the government announced a deal with
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. in which the drugmaker agreed to pay
$300 million to defer prosecution related to its fraudulent
manipulation of sales and income, in exchange for its
cooperation and meeting certain terms. The Justice Department
has been investigating KPMG and some former executives for
promoting the tax shelters from 1996 through 2002 for wealthy
individuals. The shelters allegedly abused the tax laws and
yielded big fees for KPMG while costing the government as much
as $1.4 billion in lost revenue, The Wall Street Journal
reported in Thursday's editions.
"KPMG Addresses Ex-Partners Unlawful Conduct," The New York
Times, June 16, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-KPMG-Investigation.html?
KPMG Apologizes for Tax Shelters
Seeking to stave off possible federal
criminal charges that it promoted improper tax shelters and
obstructed probes into them, KPMG LLP acknowledged that former
partners had acted illegally and apologized. "KPMG takes full
responsibility for the unlawful conduct by former KPMG partners
during that period, and we deeply regret that it occurred," the
firm said in a statement issued yesterday. The public contrition
has been common with other firms and companies under legal
pressure, but it hasn't been with KPMG. It came after The Wall
Street Journal reported that Justice Department officials were
debating whether to indict the firm, and it marks a reversal.
The firm for years used aggressive litigation tactics that set
it apart from the three other Big Four accounting firms, which
moved more quickly to resolve allegations that they peddled
improper tax shelters. KPMG's past uncompromising stance is at
the heart of a possible obstruction charge, a person familiar
with the matter said.
Kara Scannell, "KPMG Apologizes for Tax Shelters," The Wall
Street Journal, June 17, 2005; Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111896597467162114,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on KPMG's scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#KPMG
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. agreed to pay $2.2 billion to settle
a lawsuit filed by investors in Enron
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. agreed to pay
$2.2 billion to settle a lawsuit filed by investors in Enron,
according to the
Associated Press. The decision by
the third largest bank in the United States comes just four days
after Citigroup said it would pay $2 billion to settle the
claims against it in the shareholder lawsuit, which is led by
the University of California’s Board of Regents.
"Another Enron Settlement," Inside Higher Ed, June 15, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/15/qt
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron scandal are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
Watergate: The known and the hushed up conspiracies
Watergate involved two conspiracies. The first, now
ancient history, was the botched cover-up of a break-in at the Democratic
National Committee headquarters, in which President Nixon was briefly complicit.
But we now know there was a far larger and more successful conspiracy involving
the FBI's No. 2, to rifle confidential files, to help The Washington Post bring
down a president who had topped its enemies list since Joe McCarthy had gone to
his grave.
Patrick J. Buchanan, "Watergate: The Great Myth of American Journalism," Human
Events Online, June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=7706
Music: Whiskey Bar ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/whiskeybar.htm
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
June 18, 2005 message from Bob Blystone
The web site below produced by the University of
British Columbia reminds one of those beautiful flowers.
http://www.ubcbotanicalgarden.org/potd/
Each day they post a flower of the day and provide
information for the subject flower. The photos can be quite stunning and I
have the urge to print the pictures and put them up on the wall. The photos
are archived so one can look back on previous selections.
Reply from Bob Jensen
It's been a cold and wet summer in the White
Mountains. Nevertheless, our lupine fields have been nice.
We all get heavier as we get older because, there's
a lot more information in our heads. That's my story and I’m sticking to it.
Garfield
Proving that I am right would be admitting that I
could be wrong.
Pierre Caron de Beaumarchais
Check the charges on your MasterCard billings (this may also affect
Discover,Visa, and American Express to a lesser extent). I recommend
changing your credit card numbers the same as if you lost each credit card.
You can do so using the phone number on the back of each card. It may take
a week or two to get your new cards, so I suggest that you wait until you get
your new MasterCard before ordering new numbers on your other cards.
MasterCard International reported yesterday that
more than 40 million credit card accounts of all brands might have been exposed
to fraud through a computer security breach at a payment processing company,
perhaps the largest case of stolen consumer data to date.
Eric Dash and Tom Zeller, Jr., "MasterCard Says 40 Million Files Are Put at
Risk," The New York Times, June 18, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/nytJune18
Using Your Cell Phone Anywhere in the World ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/19/travel/19prac.html
Compact Cameras Get Faster, Smarter, Thinner ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/10/AR2005061001350.html?referrer=email
Review of a sociologist's book Damned Lies and Statistics: How
Numbers Confuse Public Issues ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/more_damned_lies_and_statistics.htm
Self-evidently a sequel to Best’s previous book, it
continues a formula that was successful in providing an accessible account
of some more of the numerical misdemeanours of modern society. Coming from a
sociologist, this is again a remarkably readable and even grammatical work
(he knows, for example that data is a plural word). The formula of avoiding
anything but the most superficial calculation has the advantage of appealing
to a wide audience, but occasionally it creates problems of circumlocution
and fuzziness. On the other hand, in the Best tradition, there are many
concise bons mots that neatly encapsulate a truth; such as crime waves are
not so much patterns of criminal behaviour as they are patterns in media
coverage.
There is apt coverage of the modern urge to attach
numbers where they cannot possibly apply, such as the quality of teaching.
On the whole sociological jargon is avoided, with occasional lapses, though
the avoidance of naming some important concepts tends to lead to their being
lost in the verbiage. The post hoc fallacy, for example, gets buried in an
anecdote about breast implants, and it is too important for that. Sometimes
the simplification is positively misleading. We have, for example,
“cherry-picking (sometimes called data-dredging)”. These concepts are not
equivalent, though they often exist together.
These are,
however, rather pedantic quibbles, and the book is very successful in
achieving its aim of warning ordinary intelligent people of the dangers of
believing the numbers that they read. It is one of the tragedies of modern
Anglo-Saxon society that the majority of such readers are almost uniformly
innumerate. The approach here is to classify various numbers in the chapter
headings (missing numbers, confusing numbers, scary numbers,
authoritative numbers, magical numbers and contentious numbers). There
is a final optimistic chapter called Towards statistical numeracy,
which highlights some of the resources to be found in the Number Watch
links.
Damned Lies and Statistics: How Numbers Confuse Public Issues, by Joel
Best, University of California Press, 2004, ISBN 0 520 23830 3
How Schools Cheat From underreporting violence to inflating graduation
rates to fudging test scores, educators are lying to the American public ---
http://www.reason.com/0506/fe.ls.how.shtml
Listen to the classics: Download audio books from the NY Public
Library
The New York Public Library announced Monday that it is
making 700 books _ from classics to current best sellers _ available to members
in digital audio form for downloading onto PCs, CD players and portable
listening devices.
"N.Y. Public Library Starts Digital Library," The Washington Post, June
13, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/13/AR2005061301093.html?referrer=email
Bob Jensen's helpers when searching for Searching for Audio Books, Clips,
Lectures, Speeches, and Books are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Audio
I haven't tried this but Snopes says it won't work ---
http://www.snopes.com/autos/techno/keyless.asp
Urban Legend: How to unlock your car using a cell phone
Have you locked the keys in the car? If you lock
your keys in the car and the spare keys are home, call someone at home on
your cell phone and ask them to get your car keys.
Hold your cell phone about a foot from your car
door and have the other person at home press the unlock button on your keys
while holding it near the phone on their end.
Your car will unlock. It will save someone from
having to drive your keys
to you. Distance is no object. You could be
hundreds of miles away, and if you can reach someone who has the remote" for
your car, you can unlock the doors (or the trunk this way!)
540 or more examples of Nigerian fraud email messages that plague us daily
---
http://www.potifos.com/fraud/
Bob Jensen's threads on these and similar fruads are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
The MSN new toolbar's Windows Desktop
Search feature is better than Google's Desktop Search
toolbar
Windows won't have integrated
desktop search until the fall of 2006, and IE won't have
built-in tabbed browsing until this summer. But Microsoft
has just released a free product that adds both features to
Windows computers. These add-on versions of desktop search
and tabbed browsing aren't as good as their built-in
counterparts, but they get the basic job done. Microsoft's
new, free utility goes by the ridiculously long name of MSN
Search Toolbar With Windows Desktop Search, and it can be
downloaded at
http://toolbar.msn.com/
. When you download the toolbar, it
adds a new row of icons and drop-down menus to the IE
browser. Many of these are aimed at driving users to other
MSN products, like its Hotmail email service. But you can
also use the toolbar to turn on tabbed browsing and to
perform desktop searches . . . The MSN toolbar's Windows
Desktop Search feature is better. It beats the most popular
add-in desktop search product for Windows, Google Desktop
Search, but it's slower and more cumbersome than the
integrated search in Apple's new operating system.
Walter Mossberg, " Free Microsoft Stopgap Offers Tabbed
Browsing And Desktop Searching," The Wall Street Journal,
June 16, 2005 ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/ptech.html
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm |
|
Are Business Schools Failing the World
JEFFREY E. GARTEN, 58, who is stepping down after 10
years as dean of the Yale School of Management, says he does not think American
business schools are doing a good enough job. Here are excerpts from a
conversation with Mr. Garten, who became the dean after a career on Wall Street
specializing in debt restructuring abroad and a stint as under secretary of
commerce for international trade . . . It's extremely difficult to figure out
what to teach in a two-year course, to reflect today's realities, let alone what
the world will look like 10 or 20 years from now when the graduates reach their
stride in terms of their careers.
William J. Holstein, "Are Business Schools Failing the World?" The New York
Times, June 19, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/19/business/yourmoney/19advi.html
June 19, 2005 reply from Jagdish Gangolly
[JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU]
AECMers also might like to read the article "How
Business Schools lost their way" by Warren Bennis and James O'Toole in the
may 2005 issue of HBR. Fascinating. It makes many of the same points as the
Garten interview.
A far more potent article ("Bad management
theories are destroying good management practices") is the one by Sumantra
Ghoshal of the London Business School, published postumously in the Journal
"Academy of Management Learning & Education" a few months ago. If I had my
way, this would be a required reading for all B-school faculty.
Paul Williams also has an article "A Social view
on accounting ethics" in Research on Accounting Ethics that expresses
similar views.
I would draw the following sequence of events (I
am caricaturing below, but there is a good dose of truth nevertheless):
Stage 1: It is my understanding that B-schools
sprung out of Economics departments because of their emphasis on
non-business aspects of economics and the lack of tolerance of
non-traditional/innovative interdisciplinary research of great value in
business (real world is not stove-piped) -- look for example at the
pathbreaking Columbia dissertation of William Cooper (Revisions to the
theory of the firm") that was turned down (if my memory is right), but
subsequently published in a reputed economics journal.
Stage 2: Separation from the economics
departments got the B-schools autonomy, and the so-called "clinical" faculty
were very much a part of the community. While this arrangement was ideal,
the problem was the desperate need of the B Schools for academic
respectability and credibility. The pendulum swung again in stage 3.
Stage 3: To gain academic respectability, B
schools went back to their "roots" stove-piped research. In fact much of the
research in B schools today, in my opinion, could be done far more
efficiently with far greater quality control, in the traditional departments
across the campus. Also, clinical faculty are looked upon often as necessary
evil to be tolerated because they give us a modicum of credibility in the
business world. Looks like the pendulum may be swinging again.
I have lived through all three of the stages
above. When I was an undergraduate, we were taught most courses by
"clinical" faculty (accounting by practicing chartered accountants,
actuarial subjects by practicing actuaries, law courses by practicing
barristers/solicitors; I was surprised to discover that even my statistics
instructor ran a small-scale production shop). Early in graduate school, I
was taught Operations Research by practitioners from ICI and BAT, MIS by an
engineer at Honeywell, Production Management by one from Exide Batteries,
Personnel management by one from Alcan subsidiary,... However, as I
progressed through my graduate education I saw less and less of them until
they almost completely disappeared, at least for the graduate students.
To be frank, this has affected accounting far
more than some other areas in Bschools (specially in Finance where the
interactions between the academia and the industry are strong). In my humble
opinion, the main reason for this is that the real world is, of necessity,
normative (the only reason in business to understand a mousetrap is to be
able to build a better one, in the academia it seems to be to contemplate
the navel), whereas in accounting academia we have given normative research
a bum rap. Consequently there is little substantive interaction between the
academia and the profession except on a social basis.
Respectfully submitted,
Jagdish
Pay for Internet purchases using the new Google
electronic-payment service
Google Inc. this year plans to offer an
electronic-payment service that could help the Internet-search company diversify
its revenue and may put it in competition with eBay Inc.'s PayPal unit,
according to people familiar with the matter.
Kevin J. Delaney and Mylene Mangalindan, "Google Plans Online-Payment Service:
New Business May Diversify Revenue Stream, Compete With eBay's PayPal Arm,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 20, 2005; Page B4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111905141149263168,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
A lavish looter will have to take some time off from
spending his hundreds of millions of booty
L. Dennis Kozlowski, the former chief executive of Tyco
International, and his top lieutenant were convicted yesterday on fraud,
conspiracy and grand larceny charges, bringing an end to a three-year-long case
that came to symbolize an era of corporate greed and scandal. The
four-month-long trial was the second time Mr. Kozlowski and Mr. Swartz were
tried on charges of stealing $150 million from Tyco - a conglomerate whose
products range from security systems to health care - and reaping $430 million
more by covertly selling company shares while '"artificially inflating" the
value of the stock
Andrew Ross Sorkin, "Ex-Chief and Aide Guilty of Looting Millions at Tyco,"
The New York Times, June 18, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/TycoVerdict
Another review of Freakonomics
"A Romp Through Theories More Fanciful Than Freaky," by Roger Lowenstein,
The New York Times, June 19, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/19/business/yourmoney/19shelf.html
The authors show the dangers in the crack trade by
pointing out that the fatality rate for street dealers is greater than that
of inmates on death row in Texas; they demonstrate the power of information,
and the way the Internet has eroded the pricing power of automobile dealers,
by recounting how a quite unrelated network (the Ku Klux Klan) was done in
by an infiltrator who broadcast the group's secrets.
The book is only barely about economics, freakish
or otherwise, and even when the authors venture into a standard tutorial,
such as one about how supply and demand influence wages, they do so with
delightful and unexpected curveballs. Thus, they observe, "The typical
prostitute earns more than the typical architect." This is less surprising
than it might appear. Working conditions limit the supply of prostitutes
and, as for demand, the authors mischievously observe that "an architect is
more likely to hire a prostitute than vice versa."
Their protestation notwithstanding, "Freakonomics"
does have a unifying theme, which is the power of incentives to explain, and
perhaps to predict, behavior. The authors clearly tilt against the
one-dimensional theory, so dear to orthodox economists, that people are
always motivated solely by maximizing their wealth. Rather, they side with
the up-and-coming behavioralist school, which sees people's motivations as
more nuanced and polydimensional.
Continued in article
Cognitive Science ePrint Search Engine ---
http://cogprints.org/
Welcome to CogPrints,
an electronic archive for
self-archive papers in any area of
Psychology,
neuroscience, and
Linguistics, and many areas of
Computer Science (e.g.,
artificial intelligence,
robotics,
vison,
learning,
speech,
neural networks),
Philosophy (e.g., mind,
language,
knowledge,
science,
logic),
Biology (e.g., ethology,
behavioral ecology,
sociobiology,
behaviour genetics,
evolutionary theory),
Medicine (e.g.,
Psychiatry,
Neurology,
human genetics,
Imaging),
Anthropology (e.g.,
primatology,
cognitive ethnology,
archeology,
paleontology), as well as
any other portions of the
physical, social
and mathematical
sciences that are pertinent to the study of cognition. |
|
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
From Nine to Nine: Technology is far from labor saving
A new report says advances in technology,
particularly in the mobile variety, will result in more Americans working longer
hours. This cannot be promising for people who already confuse the words "job"
and "life."
Robert MacMillan, "Workin' 9 to 9," The Washington Post, June 16,
2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/16/AR2005061600801.html?referrer=email
Comics Looking to Spread A Little (free) Laughter on the Web ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/15/AR2005061502251.html?referrer=email
Evaluating Faculty at the University of Tennessee
Jan R. Williams, "Faculty Evaluation: Lessons Learned," AACSB eNewsline
---
http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-4/Issue-6/dc-janwilliams.asp
No relief for relief efforts: Import tariffs discourage disaster
relief and the spirit of giving
New Delhi: Oxfam has had to pay $US1 million ($1.3
million) in customs duty to the Sri Lankan Government for importing 25
four-wheel-drive vehicles to help victims of the tsunami. The sum was levied by
customs in Colombo, which has refused to grant tax exemptions to
non-governmental organisations working to repair damage caused by the Boxing Day
disaster, which killed at least 31,000 people in the country. The Indian-made
Mahindra vehicles, essential to negotiate damaged roads and rough tracks, were
stuck in port at Colombo for almost a month as officials of the British charity
completed the small mountain of paperwork required to release them. Customs
charged $US5000 demurrage for every day they stood idle. Oxfam said it had "no
choice" but to pay the 300 per cent import tax or face further delays to its
relief operation.
"Sri Lanka charges Oxfam $1.3m to bring in jeeps," Sydney Morning Herald,
June 18, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/06/17/1118869095366.html
College grads enter an encouraging job market
But compared with recent years, America's 1.35 million
new college graduates are having an easier time of it. “It's been a good job
market for grads,” says John Challenger, CEO of the global outplacement firm
Challenger, Gray & Christmas. “[It's] up 13 percent over last year. The last
three years have been very rough.”
Kevin Tibbles, "College grads enter an encouraging job market: Things are
looking up, if you know where to look," MSNBC, June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8259716/
The future of textbooks?
From Jim Mahar's blog on June 16, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
The future of text books?
Megginson and Smart
Introdcution to Corporate Finance--Companion Site
Wow.
I think we may have a glimpse into the future of text books with this one.
It is the new Introduction to Corporate Finance by William Megginson
and Scott Smart.
From videos for most topics, to interviews, to
powerpoint, to a student study guide, to excel help...just a total
integration of a text and a web site! Well done!
At St. Bonaventure we have adopted the text for the
fall semester and the book actually has made me excited to be teaching an
introductory course! It is that good!!
BTW Before I get accused of selling out, let me say
I get zero for this plug. I have met each author at conferences but do not
really know either of them. And like any first edition book there may be
some errors, but that said, this is the future of college text books!
Check out some of the online material here. More
material is available with book purchase.
June 18 reply from Robert Holmes Glendale College
[rcholmes@GLENDALE.CC.CA.US]
I chose not to submit my personal information in
return for a look at the material, but just a look at the resources was
enough to tell me they are extensive. How much time do we expect our
students will spend each week on a course? What do we think they should do
with that time? Attending class, reading the text, looking at Powepoint,
working Excel problems, reviewing the answers to the problems, looking at
resources in the Resource Integration Guide, writing papers, taking notes,
"learning"/memorizing the notes. Does looking at a lot of different things
produce learning? Is it efficient? I look forward to hearing about how many
of these resources are actually used, and if they produce more learning.
June 19, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Robert,
What gets used depends heavily on the quality of the materials. I've
found little use for many of the supplements that accompany the most
accounting textbooks because the supplements are generally cheap shots and
over-hyped crap, including the videos and many of the PowerPoint shows. One
major publisher, for example, has PowerPoint with audio that simply reads
the PowerPoint captions. The videos sometimes are only company PR blurbs
that have little or nothing to add to accounting study.
I'm told by insiders that what gets spent on quality supplements really
depends upon market size, and accounting is not really a big market relative
to mathematics, basic science, economics, and other courses required that
are part of the core for virtually all college students.
I think what Jim was trying to say was that the Megginson and Smart
textbook is the first finance text that had real money spent on supplements.
I'm still waiting to see the first accounting textbook that has real money
spent on Web supplements.
Bob Jensen
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Rethinking Mathematics
Rethinking Schools: Spring 2005: Rethinking Mathematics (with
special emphasis on math education of urban African Americans) ---
http://www.rethinkingschools.org/archive/19_03/19_03.shtml
Images of farm machine history ---
http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/whi/feature/mccormick/
The McCormick-International Harvester Company
Collection includes hundreds of thousands of images dating from the 1840s
through the 1980s. The images were created by and for Cyrus McCormick and his
family, the McCormick companies, and the International Harvester Company. They
document agriculture, rural life, industrial labor, advertising, small towns,
transportation, and the agricultural machinery, truck and construction equipment
industries.
Bob Jensen's threads on history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
June 17, 2005 reply from Paula Ward
The same/related (?) website has a fantastic
collection of manuscripts, one of which is the Lyman Copeland Draper
Manuscript Collection: The collection as a whole covers primarily the period
between the French and Indian War and the War of 1812 (ca. 1755-1815). The
geographic concentration is on what Draper and his contemporaries called the
"Trans-Allegheny West," which included the western Carolinas and Virginia,
some portions of Georgia and Alabama, the entire Ohio River valley, and
parts of the Mississippi River valley.
I forget how many volumes and rolls of microfilm
make up the Draper Manuscript Collection, but it is huge. A very small
portion of it is available on the website. As luck would have it, the
portion available on the website includes information about a member of my
family (Benjamin Kelley/Kelly) who was captured, along with Daniel Boone, by
the Shawnee Indians in 1778 at the Blue Licks in Kentucky:
Document AJ-150: Recollections on Capture by the
Shawnee, 1778 - Jackson's Recollections as recorded by Lyman Copeland Draper
(14 pages on microfilm):
http://content.wisconsinhistory.org/cgi-bin/docviewer.exe?CISOROOT=/aj&CISOPTR=17869&CISOSHOW=17854
All this and more at The Wisconsin Historical
Society's American Journeys: Eyewitness Accounts of Early American
Exploration and Settlement
http://www.americanjourneys.org/index.asp
Expressions of Faith (Religion) ---
http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/galleries/faith/
A new version of Camtasia includes the ability to feed video camera
footage into your videos of computer screen images. Other new features are
described at
http://www.techsmith.com/products/studio/comingsoon.asp
Bob Jensen's tutorials using Camtasia and tutorials explaining how to use
Camtasia to create video lectures are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Ten years of the Louvre online (art history)
Musee du Louvre --- http://www.louvre.fr/
Bob Jensen's threads on art history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Hedge Funds Are Growing: Is This Good or Bad?
When the ratings agencies downgraded General Motors
debt to junk status in early May, a chill shot through the $1 trillion hedge
fund industry. How many of these secretive investment pools for the rich and
sophisticated would be caught on the wrong side of a GM bond bet? In the end,
the GM bond bomb was a dud. Hedge funds were not as exposed as many had thought.
But the scare did help fuel the growing debate about hedge funds. Are they a
benefit to the financial markets, or a menace? Should they be allowed to
continue operating in their free-wheeling style, or should they be reined in by
new requirements, such as a move to make them register as investment advisors
with the Securities and Exchange Commission?
"Hedge Funds Are Growing: Is This Good or Bad?" Knowledge@wharton,
June 2005 ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1225
German Chancellor's Call for Global Regulations to Curb Hedge Funds
Germany and the United States are parting company
again, this time over Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's call for international
regulations to govern hedge funds. Treasury Secretary John W. Snow, speaking
here Thursday at the end of a five-country European tour, said the United States
opposed "heavy-handed" curbs on markets. He said that he was not familiar with
the German proposals, but left little doubt about how Washington would react. "I
think we ought to be very careful about heavy-handed regulation of markets
because it stymies financial innovation," Mr. Snow said after a news conference
here to sum up his visit. Noting that the Securities and Exchange Commission has
proposed that hedge funds be required to register themselves, he said he
preferred the "light touch rather than the heavy regulatory burden."
Mark Landler, "U.S. Balks at German Chancellor's Call for Global Regulations to
Curb Hedge Funds," The New York Times, June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/17/business/worldbusiness/17hedge.html?
Bob Jensen's definitions and discussions of hedge funds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#HedgeFunds
Question
What is PC World's choice for the best product of 2005?
Answer
The 100 Best Products of 2005," PC World, June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/article/0,aid,120763,00.asp
Blog Navigation Software
Blog Navigator is a new program that makes it easy to
read blogs on the Internet. It integrates into various blog search engines and
can automatically determine RSS feeds from within properly coded websites.
Blog Navigator 1.2
http://www.stardock.com/products/blognavigator/
Bob Jensen's threads on blogs and Weblogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
What do our names mean? (this is about as serious as astrology) ---
http://www.paulsadowski.com/Numbers.asp
This article has a long quotation from the transcript of the 1895 trial of
Oscar Wilde
"Not So Wilde," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, June 16, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/16/mclemee
(This article has a long quotation from the transcript of the trial of Oscar
Wilde.)
In any case, the hold of Wilde’s case
on the public mind was — and still is — a matter of his
grand transgression. It bears scarcely any resemblance to
the fascination evoked by Michael Jackson, who embodies
something quite different:
regression.
His retreat to a childlike state appears to be so complete
as to prove almost unimaginable, except, perhaps, to a
psychiatrist.Freud wrote of a
neverending struggle between the pleasure principle (the
ruling passion of the infant’s world) and the reality
principle (which obliges us to sustain a certain amount of
repression, since the world is not particularly friendly to
our immediate urges).
Wilde was the most eloquent
defender that the pleasure principle ever had: His aesthetic
doctrine held that we ought to transform daily life into a
kind of art, and so regain a kind of childlike wonder and
creativity, free from pedestrian distractions.
Like all such utopian visions, this
one tends to founder on the problem that someone will, after
all, need to clean up. The drama of Michael Jackson’s trial
came from its proof that — even with millions of dollars and
a staff of housekeepers to keep it at bay — the reality
principle does have a way of reasserting itself.
And now that the trial is over,
perhaps it’s appropriate to recall the paradoxical question
Wilde once asked someone about a mutual friend: “When you
are alone with him, does he take off his
face and reveal his mask?”
Continued in the article
What college students going to pot at the highest rates?
Boulder, Colo., and Boston lead the nation in
marijuana use, according to a study released Thursday. The lowest use was
reported in northwestern Iowa and southern Texas. For the first time, the
government looked at the use of drugs, cigarettes, alcohol and various other
substances, legal as well as illegal, by region rather than by state. In Boston,
the home of Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern and several other
colleges, 12.2 percent reported using marijuana in the previous 30 days. In
Boulder County, the home of the University of Colorado, 10.3 percent reported
using marijuana during those 30...
"Boulder, Boston Lead Nation In Marijuana Use Young, Active People Will
Experiment More With At-Risk Behavior, Doctor Says," The Denver
Channel, June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.thedenverchannel.com/health/4620681/detail.html
Farm Subsidies Use "Creative Accounting"
The United States and the European Union are using
“creative accounting” to mask the huge subsidy payments they are making to their
farmers, undermining international talks, according to Oxfam. Oxfam, the British
aid agency, said rich countries had promised to eliminate export subsidies by
2016, but they are encouraging farmers, through subsidies, to produce excess
goods and dump them on the world market, the Associated Press reported.
"Farm Subsidies Use 'Creative Accounting'," AccountingWeb, June 16, 2005
---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=101009
Brazilian crop boom threatens U.S. farms
It's a farmer's wonderland, where the fecund soil can
be had for as little as $200 a sun-drenched acre and a Maryland-sized chunk of
land is cleared each year for cotton, corn, soybean and cattle farms.
Agriculture is booming in Brazil, and U.S. farmers are taking notice. Buffeted
by high production costs, low market prices and the World Trade Organization,
Americans increasingly look to low-cost, low-wage Brazil for economic survival.
"Brazilian crop boom threatens U.S. farms," Arizona Daily Star, May 22,
2005 ---
http://www.dailystar.com/dailystar/news/76261.php
Social Security: Bad for the Democrats Why are liberals supporting an
illiberal system? ---
http://www.reason.com/hod/bo061305.shtml
Accounting Rules So Plentiful "It's Nuts"
There are perhaps 2,000 accounting rules and standards
that, when written out, possibly exceed the U.S. tax code in length. Yet, there
are only the Ten Commandments. So Bob Herz, chairman of the rule-setting
Financial Accounting Standards Board, is asked this: How come there are 2,000
rules to prepare a financial statement but only 10 for eternal salvation? "It is
nuts," Herz allows. "But you're not going to get it down to ten commandments
because the transactions are so complicated. . . . And the people on the front
lines, the companies and their auditors, are saying: 'Give me principles, but
tell me exactly what to do; I don't want to be second-guessed.' " Nonetheless,
the FASB (pronounced, by accounting insiders, as "FAZ-bee") is embarking on
efforts to simplify and codify accounting rules while improving them and
integrating them with international standards.
"Accounting Rules So Plentiful 'It's Nuts' ; Standards Board Takes on Tough Job
to Simplify, Codify," SmartPros, June 8, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x48525.xml
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
Orange Prize for Fiction
The story of a woman who bears a child she loathes,
only to watch him become a teenage high-school killer, has won The Economist's
chief fiction reviewer, Lionel Shriver, one of Britain's most prestigious
literary awards, the Ł30,000 ($55,000) Orange prize for fiction by women. Ms
Shriver's existing agent, and nearly a dozen others, turned down “We Need to
Talk About Kevin” (Perennial, Serpent's Tail) before Kim Witherspoon in New York
took it on and it was published in April 2003. An unflinching examination of the
darker side of parenthood, the book became a lightning rod for debate and a
word-of-mouth hit on both sides of the Atlantic after another writer, Amy Hempel,
and a determined group of like-minded fans began to recommend it to friends and
other readers. Who says hand-selling doesn't work?
"Orange Prize for Fiction," The Economist, June 9, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/books/displayStory.cfm?story_id=4055082
This is hairy
Alan Horner has had the pleasure of his wife's long
hair for 12 years. He washes it three times a week and caresses it constantly.
Kusmuryarti Horner's nearly 6-foot locks stretch down her spine and extend
longer than her 5-foot-1 frame. But now Kusmuryarti, 31, is going to let down
her brown hair, cut it off, pack it up and sell it on eBay. The Horners hope the
money they make on her auctioned mane will help them put a down payment on their
first home.
Tanya Caldwell, "Wellington woman to sell hair on eBay in hopes of earning down
payment for home," Sun-Sentinel, June 17, 2005 ---
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sfl-phair17jun17,0,284410.story?track=mostemailedlink
Signs forwarded by Auntie Bev
In a Veterinarian's waiting room: "Be back in 5 minutes Sit! Stay!"
At an Optometrist's Office "If you don't see what you're looking for, you've
come to the right place."
In a Podiatrist's office: "Time wounds all heels."
On a Septic Tank Truck in Oregon: Yesterday's Meals on Wheels
On a Septic Tank Truck sign: "We're #1 in the #2 business."
At a Proctologist's door "To expedite your visit please back in."
On a Plumber's truck: "We repair what your husband fixed."
On a Plumber's truck: "Don't sleep with a drip. Call your plumber.."
Pizza Shop Slogan: "7 days without pizza makes one weak."
At a Tire Shop in Milwaukee: "Invite us to your next blowout."
On a Plastic Surgeon's Office door: "Hello. Can we pick your nose?"
At a Towing Company: "We don't charge an arm and a leg. We want tows."
On an Electrician's truck: "Let us remove your shorts."
In a Nonsmoking Area: "If we see smoke, we will assume you are on fire and
take appropriate action."
On a Maternity Room door: "Push. Push. Push."
On a Taxidermist's window: "We really know our stuff"
On a Fence: "Salesmen welcome! Dog food is expensive."
At a Car Dealership: "The best way to get back on your feet - miss a car
payment."< /SPAN>
Outside a Muffler Shop: "No appointment necessary. We hear you coming."
At the Electric Company: "We would be "de-lighted" if you send in your
payment. However, if you don't, you will be."
In a Restaurant window: "Don't stand there and be hungry, Come on in and get
fed up."
In the front yard of a Funeral Home: "Drive carefully. We'll wait."
At a Propane Filling Station, "Thank heaven for little grills."
And don't forget the sign at a Chicago Radiator Shop: "Best place in town to
take a leak."
Debbie Bowling provided the following tidbits
TIDBITS WEEK OF MAY 31
Boom in Alberta Oil Sands Fuels
Pipeline Dreams
As Routes Reach
Capacity, Race Is On to Link Fields To West Coast and China
FORT
MCMURRAY, Alberta -- Canada, with its vast oil-sands resource, is gearing up to
export more crude oil than ever before. But with Canada's pipelines just about
full, the burgeoning oil-sands industry is running into a bottleneck.
That has touched off a new race: to
build massive, expensive pipelines that will carry expanding oil production from
this isolated region in northern Alberta hundreds of miles over mountains and
forests to the Pacific Coast and major oil-thirsty markets, especially China and
the U.S. West Coast.
The winner among the pipeline
companies could have the best chance to tap new markets and sign up customers.
The companies could also establish themselves as intermediaries between Canada's
burgeoning oil-sands region and Chinese energy companies, which have been
seeking reserves world-wide to meet that nation's surging energy needs.
Last month, Enbridge Inc. of Calgary,
Alberta, signed an agreement to share the costs of building a 2.5 billion
Canadian dollar, or about US$2 billion, pipeline, called the Gateway Pipeline,
with China state oil company PetroChina Co. Terasen Inc., based in Vancouver,
British Columbia, and the only company already operating an oil pipeline from
Alberta to Canada's West Coast, has proposed a rival C$2 billion plan to expand
the existing pipeline and plans a second, new line.
The companies also plan projects along
their more traditional routes to the U.S. market through the northern Midwest.
But the westbound projects, which would open up new markets for oil sands,
promise to be at the same time more lucrative and potentially more difficult.
The pipeline companies already are negotiating with Native American bands for
land-use rights, gearing up for the expense and technical complexities of the
big projects and facing the concerns of environmentalists.
"We're very concerned about the pace
and extent of oil-sands development. All aspects of the environment are becoming
stressed because of cumulative impact," says Chris Severson Baker, a spokesman
for the Pembina Institute, an Alberta-based environmental group.
Oil sands are gritty deposits of
tar-like bitumen, and Canada's deposits are now recognized as the biggest source
of crude oil outside Saudi Arabia. Extracting and processing sticky bitumen is
much more expensive than producing and refining conventional crude, but global
supply concerns have pushed crude prices to about $50 a barrel and made bitumen
projects more economically viable.
Producers have announced plans to
invest some C$80 billion in development of Alberta's oil sands, according to the
Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers in Calgary, and they expect to
double production to about two million barrels a day from oil sands by roughly
the end of this decade. Some of the world's biggest energy companies are
involved, including Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch/Shell Group.
Enbridge wants to build a new pipeline
from northern Alberta to a proposed deep-water tanker terminal at Prince Rupert
or Kitimat, on the northern British Columbia coast. Either port could
accommodate the massive oil tankers with capacities exceeding 250,000 metric
tons, or roughly 1.6 million barrels, to ship to China.
Under its agreement with Enbridge,
PetroChina will commit to renting pipeline capacity for 200,000 barrels of oil a
day, or half of the Gateway Pipeline's total capacity, which would effectively
underwrite half the project's costs. Enbridge has also said it is willing to
sell up to a 49% interest in Gateway to one or more equity partners.
Enbridge Vice President Richard
Sandahl said his company and PetroChina are in talks to firm up terms of their
agreement, which might include PetroChina acquiring a minority stake in the
project. "It wasn't an easy commitment for the Chinese to make, but
diversification and security of oil supply are priority issues to them," he
said.
Enbridge President and Chief Executive
Patrick D. Daniel said three years of preliminary discussions with landowners,
including Native American groups, along the proposed pipeline's route haven't
raised any insurmountable issues. Nonetheless, evidence of the land-access
difficulties facing pipeline projects was brought starkly into focus earlier
this month when a group of major energy companies abruptly halted
preconstruction work on a northern natural-gas pipeline, due in part to lack of
progress on reaching agreements with aboriginal groups.
Andrew George, lands and resources
director of the Office of the Wet'suwet'en, says the five northern British
Columbia native clans that his organization represents want to be involved in
detailed consultations on Enbridge's pipeline project "from the get-go, at a
strategic level, when the big decisions are made." He said the group has held
only preliminary talks with Enbridge.
Terasen's pipeline project, to expand
its TransMountain Pipe Line from Alberta to Vancouver, is set to begin next
year. The expansion would take pipeline capacity to 300,000 barrels a day by the
end of 2008 from 225,000, and to as much as 850,000 barrels a day in potential
future project stages. Because the Vancouver oil terminal can't handle very
large crude tankers, most of the additional Canadian oil shipments would
initially go to California or the U.S. Pacific Northwest on small vessels. Later
the company would build a second line to Prince Rupert or Kitimat, to
accommodate oil exports to Asia.
TAMSIN CARLISLE, "Boom in Alberta Oil
Sands Fuels Pipeline Dreams," The Wall Street Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page A2,
http://snipurl.com/oil0531
Tires Get An Expiration Date
Drivers who know to check tires for
worn treads and low air pressure now have something else to worry about:
vintage.
Ford Motor Co., in a move roiling the
tire industry, has started urging consumers to replace tires after six years.
The car maker says its research shows that tires "degrade over time, even when
they are not being used." That means even pristine-looking spares that have
never left the trunk should be pitched after a half-dozen years.
That's a radical concept in the staid
U.S. tire business, which insists there's no scientific evidence to support a
"use by" date for tires. It would also surprise most motorists, who are taught
that a tire's lifespan is measured mainly by tread depth. The tire industry says
that tires are safe as long as the tread depth is a minimum of 1/16th of an
inch, no matter what the age, and there are no visible cuts, signs of uneven
wear, bulges or excessive cracking. Other trouble signs are if tires create
vibration or excessive noise.
"Tires are not milk," says Daniel
Zielinski, a spokesman for the Rubber Manufacturers Association, the tire
industry's main trade group.
For many consumers, the issue never
comes up, since passenger-car tires last an average of 44,000 miles -- meaning
they are usually replaced before hitting the six-year mark. But many people
simply assume that unused spare tires -- even those that are a decade old -- are
as durable as brand-new tires, and sometimes use those spares as full-time
replacements for the regular tires. Classic-car buffs and others who drive only
infrequently could also be affected by the latest research.
In its new stance on tire safety, Ford
is getting some support from other researchers. Sean Kane, president of Safety
Research & Strategies Inc., an auto-safety research firm working with lawyers
who are preparing lawsuits arising from accidents thought to be linked to aging
tires, says older tires are a road hazard. Mr. Kane's group has collected a list
of 70 accidents involving older tires, which resulted in 52 deaths and 50
serious injuries.
In a sense, the U.S. car industry is
just catching up to global standards. Many European car makers as well as
Japan's Toyota Motor Corp. have long warned drivers, including those who buy
their cars in the U.S., that tires are perishable. Many of them also use a
six-year threshold for the age of a tire.
DaimlerChrysler AG has already adopted
a position parallel to Ford. The car maker's Mercedes division had been telling
drivers that tires last only six years. But starting last fall, the Chrysler
group began including such a warning in 2005 owner's manuals. "We did do some
research and we found that's just a pretty safe and steady guideline," says
Curtrise Garner, a Chrysler spokeswoman, adding that "it's a recommendation, not
a must-do."
Other car makers are also taking up
this question, and some are reaching a different conclusion than Ford. General
Motors Corp. spokesman Alan Adler says GM has discussed the aging issue, but
doesn't have any research that supports a move to such a guideline. "We're not
joining in the six-years-is-the-magic-number thing right now," he says.
The age of tires already appears on
tires, but as part of a lengthy code that is difficult for average consumers to
decipher. To find the age of a tire, look for the letters DOT on the sidewall
(indicating compliance with applicable safety standards set by the U.S.
Department of Transportation). Adjacent to these letters is the tire's serial
number, which is a combination of up to 12 numbers and letters. The last
characters are numbers that identify the week and year of manufacture. For
example, 1504 means the fifteenth week of the year 2004.
Not only are the numbers difficult to
interpret, but they can be hard to locate: The numbers are printed on only one
side of the tire, which sometimes is the one facing inward when the tire is
mounted on a wheel.
Ford's new stance on tire aging is a
direct outgrowth of the Firestone tire recall that began in August 2000. That
episode involved Firestone tires failing suddenly, mostly on Ford Explorers,
leading to a wave of deadly crashes. The crashes sparked a series of lawsuits,
including monetary and personal-injury claims, some of which are pending.
Ford's new position won't affect those
lawsuits. But it could play a role in future legal action. Some attorneys who
have sued over the Firestone case are now mounting cases that focus on tire age.
John Baldwin, a Ford materials
scientist who studied the root cause of the Firestone problems and has
spearheaded the car maker's continuing research on tire aging, says Ford's
intention is to develop a test to help prevent another Firestone-type debacle.
He says Ford's research into the Firestone problem showed that as tires age, the
chemistry of the rubber changes as oxygen migrates through the carcass of the
tire. This leads to a weakening of the internal structure that can result in
tire failures. Driving in hot climates or frequent heavy loading of vehicles
speeds this aging process, he says.
In April, Ford posted a warning on its
Web site saying that "tires generally should be replaced after six years of
normal service." The company also plans to include similar wording in owner's
manuals starting with the 2006 model year.
Firestone spokeswoman Christine
Karbowiak says the company can't comment on Ford's new recommendation, because
it hasn't seen Ford's research.
Tire makers certainly don't want to
see the six-year rule become any more deeply ingrained. While it might seem that
putting a limit on the lifespan of tires would be a boon to tire makers, who
would presumably sell more tires, the costs and complications it could create
are considerable. Among other things, the industry is worried about the
logistical problems that would arise if customers suddenly started demanding
only the "freshest" tires. In some cases, tires take months to move through
distribution channels from factories -- through wholesalers, and then on to
retail outlets.
"We don't have any data to support an
expiration date [for tires]," says Mr. Zielinski of the RMA. He agrees that age
can be a factor in tire performance, but says it shouldn't be used as the sole
reason to determine that a tire is no longer usable.
Mr. Zielinski says Ford went public
with its position without sharing its research with the tire association or
individual tire makers. Ford, in turn, says that it presented its research in
trade publications and at a series of public forums, including a technical
meeting of the rubber division of the American Chemical Society in San Antonio,
Texas, two weeks ago. Ford has also given its research to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, which is developing a test to simulate the
effects of aging on tires.
Ford's test involves putting inflated
tires into an oven for weeks at a time. The tires are then taken out and studied
to see, among other things, how well the layers of rubber hold together.
Strategic Research wants tires to be
labeled more clearly with the date they were produced, so consumers can better
identify older tires and, ultimately, an explicit expiration date.
TIMOTHY AEPPEL, "Tires Get An Expiration
Date," The Wall Street Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/tires0531
Long-Dormant Threat Surfaces: Deaths From Hepatitis C Are
Expected to Jump
In the coming decade, thousands of
baby boomers will get sick from a virus they unknowingly contracted years ago.
Some 8,000 to 10,000 people die each
year from complications related to hepatitis C, the leading cause of chronic
liver disease and liver transplants. The virus is spread through contact with
contaminated blood, usually from dirty needles or, less often, unprotected sex.
The symptoms can include jaundice, abdominal pain and nausea.
In recent decades the number of new
hepatitis C infections in the U.S. has plummeted -- falling 90% since 1989, the
result of improved screening of the blood supply and less sharing of needles by
drug users.
But the number of deaths related to
hepatitis C is expected to triple in the next 10 years, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. That's because symptoms lie fallow for
decades after infection. Many of the people getting sick today contracted the
virus from the mid-1960s through the 1980s, when infection rates skyrocketed.
Infectious-disease experts say their patients are mainly baby boomers who
probably caught the virus from risky behavior in their youth.
"The majority of my patients
experimented with drugs during the '60s and '70s and now work on Wall Street,"
says Robert S. Brown Jr., medical director for the Center for Liver Disease and
Transplantation at New York Presbyterian Hospital. In fact, two-thirds of people
with hepatitis C are white, male baby boomers who live above the poverty line,
according to the CDC.
As many as four million people in the
U.S. have been infected with hepatitis C, and world-wide 130 million people have
the virus. About 20% clear the virus without the help of drugs. But most people
carry the virus for years without knowing it -- delaying treatment and possibly
risking infecting others.
The Centers for Disease Control
estimates 60% of hepatitis C patients acquired the virus by sharing dirty
needles and syringes while doing drugs. Another 15% got the virus through
unprotected sex, and 10% have been infected through blood transfusions that
occurred before 1992 when a test for the virus was developed. Although rare,
especially in the U.S., hepatitis C can be transmitted through contaminated
devices used for tattoos, body piercing and manicures. There have also been
outbreaks in hospitals when infection-control procedures failed.
Current drug treatments have made
major strides in the past decade, but still work on only about 50% of those
suffering from chronic hepatitis C. The treatment goal is to reduce the amount
of virus in the blood in order to prevent cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease.
Roche Holding AG of Basel,
Switzerland, is the market leader in treating hepatitis C, followed by
Schering-Plough Corp. of Kenilworth, N.J. Both companies market a combination
therapy using the antiviral drug ribavirin and pegylated interferons, which are
proteins that boost the immune system. The treatment is no fun: Patients endure
weekly injections and daily pills for 48 weeks with flu-like side effects.
Promising new treatments that may
benefit more patients and have fewer side effects are on the horizon. Two small
biotech companies, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Idenix Pharmaceuticals Inc.,
both of Cambridge, Mass., have drug trials under way, though treatments probably
won't be available to patients for several years. Earlier this month, Indenix
announced that in a small clinical trial, its drug -- either alone or combined
with currently available treatments -- slashed the level of hepatitis C virus in
the blood in most patients. Vertex announced results earlier this month from a
preliminary trial involving 34 patients: Five of the participants tested
negative for the hepatitis C virus within two weeks of beginning treatment.
Hepatitis C is just one among a
several hepatitis viruses, including hepatitis A, B, D and E. Hepatitis A is
very contagious and is spread via contaminated water and food. But it can be
prevented with a vaccine and isn't life threatening. Hepatitis B can also be
prevented with a vaccine. It is similar to C, though it is more contagious and
more likely to be transmitted sexually. Hepatitis D and E are very rare in the
U.S.
There is no vaccine to prevent
hepatitis C. The virus was discovered only in 1989, and it wasn't until 1992
that a blood test was developed to detect it. The CDC says that 80% of those
infected never have symptoms. In later stages of the disease, the virus can lead
to cirrhosis, a buildup of scar tissue that blocks blood flow through the organ.
At this stage, many patients need a liver transplant to survive.
In March 2001, Larkin Fowler was
working in mergers and acquisitions for J.P. Morgan when he learned through a
blood test required to join a gym at work and a subsequent doctor's visit that
he had hepatitis C.
Mr. Fowler, now 35, believes he was
infected either in 1989 or 1998. In 1989, he and some fellow college fraternity
members went on a road trip to a football game. "A few too many cocktails and
the next thing you know we all had frat tattoos," says Mr. Fowler. In 1998, he
broke his leg while traveling in Bora Bora and received several shots in a
hospital there. Mr. Fowler thinks it is more likely he was infected by a dirty
needle while receiving medical care in Bora Bora.
Mr. Fowler completed his treatment in
May 2002. He would take his weekly injections on Friday mornings and by the
evening often be in bed with a high fever and chills. But the treatment worked
and he has since been free of the virus.
PAUL DAVIES, "Long-Dormant Threat
Surfaces: Deaths From Hepatitis C Are Expected to Jump," The Wall Street
Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/hepc0531
Despite Vow, Drug Makers Still Withhold Data
When the drug industry came under fire last summer
for failing to disclose poor results from studies of antidepressants, major drug
makers promised to provide more information about their research on new
medicines. But nearly a year later, crucial facts about many clinical trials
remain hidden, scientists independent of the companies say.
Within the drug industry, companies are sharply
divided about how much information to reveal, both about new studies and
completed studies for drugs already being sold. The split is unusual in the
industry, where companies generally take similar stands on regulatory issues.
Eli Lilly and some other companies have posted
hundreds of trial results on the Web and pledged to disclose all results for all
drugs they sell. But other drug makers, including
Merck and
Pfizer, release less
information and are reluctant to add more, citing competitive pressures.
As a result, doctors and patients lack critical
information about important drugs, academic researchers say, and the companies
can hide negative trial results by refusing to publish studies, or by
cherry-picking and highlighting the most favorable data from studies they do
publish.
"There are a lot of public statements from drug
companies saying that they support the registration of clinical trials or the
dissemination of trial results, but the devil is in the details," said Dr.
Deborah Zarin, director of
clinicaltrials.gov, a Web site financed by the
National Institutes of Health that tracks many studies.
Journal editors and academic scientists have pressed
big drug makers to release more information about their studies for years. But
the calls for more disclosure grew stronger after reports last year that several
companies had failed to publish studies that showed their antidepressants worked
no better than placebos.
In August,
GlaxoSmithKline agreed to
pay $2.5 million to settle a suit by Eliot Spitzer, the New York attorney
general, alleging that Glaxo had hidden results from trials showing that its
antidepressant Paxil might increase suicidal thoughts in children and teenagers.
At a House hearing in September, Republican and Democratic lawmakers excoriated
executives from several top companies, including Pfizer and
Wyeth, for hiding study
results. In response, many companies promised to do better.
At the same time, Merck and Pfizer have been
criticized for failing to disclose until this year clinical trial results that
indicated that cox-2 painkillers like Vioxx might be dangerous to the heart.
Drug makers test their medicines in thousands of
trials each year, and federal laws require the disclosure of all trials and
trial results to the F.D.A. While too complex for many patients to understand,
the trial results are useful to doctors and academic scientists, who use them to
compare drugs and look for clues to possible side effects. But companies are not
required to disclose trial results to scientists or the public.
Some scientists and lawmakers say new rules are
needed, and a bill that would require the companies to provide more data was
introduced in the Senate in February. So far no hearings have been scheduled on
the legislation. The bill's prospects are uncertain, said a co-sponsor, Senator
Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut.
The drug makers have been criticized both for
failing to provide advance notice of clinical trials before they begin and for
refusing to publish completed trial results for medicines that are already being
sold.
The two issues are related, because companies cannot
easily hide the results of trials that have been disclosed in advance, said Dr.
Alan Breier, chief medical officer of Lilly, the company that has gone furthest
in disclosing results.
"You're registering a trial - at some point, the
results have got to show up," Dr. Breier said. He added that disclosing trial
results was important both to give doctors and patients as much information as
possible and to improve the industry's reputation, which has been damaged by
several recent withdrawals of high-profile drugs.
"Fundamentally, what we're doing is in the interest
of patients, and I think that that is the winning model, for academia, for
industry and for the future," he said.
In September, Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, an industry lobbying group known as PhRMA, said it
would create a site for companies to post the results of completed trials. Then,
under pressure from the editors of medical journals, the major drug companies in
January agreed to expand the number of trials registered on clinicaltrials.gov,
the N.I.H. site, which was originally created so patients with life-threatening
diseases could find out about clinical trials.
But Merck, Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, three of the
six largest drug companies, have met the letter but not the spirit of that
agreement, Dr. Zarin said.
The three companies have filed only vague
descriptions of many studies, often failing even to name the drugs under
investigation, Dr. Zarin said. For example, Merck describes one trial as a
"one-year study of an investigational drug in obese patients."
Drug names are crucial, because the
clinicaltrials.gov registry is designed in part to prevent companies from
conducting several trials of a drug, then publicizing the trials with positive
results while hiding the negative ones. If the descriptions do not include drug
names, it is hard to tell how many times a drug has been studied.
"If you're a systematic reviewer trying to
understand all the results for a particular drug, you might never know," Dr.
Zarin said. "You don't know whether you're seeing the one positive result and
not the four negative results - you don't have context."
Pfizer, Merck and GlaxoSmithKline say that they
disclose their largest trials, which determine whether a drug will be approved.
Though they would not discuss their policies in detail, executives and press
representatives at the companies said generally that disclosing too much
information about early-stage trials might reveal business or scientific
secrets.
Rick Koenig, a spokesman for Glaxo, said the company
understood the concerns about disclosure and planned to add more information to
clinicaltrials.gov. He declined to be more specific, saying Glaxo and other
companies were discussing the issue with regulators and medical journal editors.
In contrast, Lilly has registered all but its
smallest trials at clinicaltrials.gov. Dr. Breier of Lilly said the company
believed that it could protect its intellectual property and still increase the
amount of information it released.
Lilly has also posted the results of many completed
studies to
clinicalstudyresults.org,
the Web site created last September by PhRMA. That site now contains some
information on nearly 80 drugs that are already on the market. Both Lilly and
Glaxo have posted detailed summaries of hundreds of studies.
Pfizer, on the other hand, has posted only a few,
and Merck has posted none.
All the companies were meeting the group's
guidelines for the site, said Dr. Alan Goldhammer, associate vice president for
regulatory affairs at PhRMA. The lobbying group requires only that its members
post a notice that a trial has been completed and a link to a published study or
a summary of an unpublished study, he said. Studies completed before October
2002 are exempt from the requirements, and PhRMA has not set penalties for
companies that do not comply.
"We're seeing pretty regular posting on a weekly
basis, and as best we can assess right now, things are on track for meeting the
goal we and our members set for ourselves," Dr. Goldhammer said.
The continued gaps in disclosure have caused some
lawmakers to call for new federal laws. The bill introduced in February by Mr.
Dodd and Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, would convert
clinicaltrials.gov into a national registry for both new trials and results and
impose civil penalties of up to $10,000 a day for companies that hide trial
data. But Mr. Dodd said that the chances the bill would pass in this Congress
were even at best.
"I haven't had that pat on the back saying, 'This is
a great idea, let's get going on this as fast as we can,' " Mr. Dodd said.
Dr. David Fassler, a psychiatry professor at the
University of Vermont and a longtime proponent of more disclosure, said that
trial reporting had improved in the last two years. But he said that a central
federally run site, as opposed to the current mix of government and industry
efforts, was the only long-term solution.
ALEX BERENSON "Despite Vow, Drug Makers Still
Withhold Data," The New York Times, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/drgdta0531
Recalling When Flying Was an Elegant Affair
AS business travel picks up,
British Airways and
Virgin Atlantic have created advertising campaigns to promote their
business-class service to American executives.
Virgin Atlantic's $4.5 million campaign focuses on
the carrier's 16 daily flights out of its nine gateways in the United States.
Each flight has been given a name that evokes the romance and elegance of travel
in years past and is described on new Web sites - one for each flight - and in
ads in regional editions of national magazines.
British Airways' $15 million campaign, which starts
tomorrow, emphasizes its flight attendants' ability to anticipate a customer's
needs. The carrier offers some 40 daily flights out of 19 American cities. It is
British Airways' first campaign created specifically for the United States
business travel market since the summer of 2000.
For both airlines, the stakes are high:
trans-Atlantic traffic originating in the United States generates 40 percent of
Virgin Atlantic's total revenue, while half of all United States revenue comes
from business-class passengers.
Almost two-thirds of British Airways' profit comes
from its trans-Atlantic flights, while business-class sales generate about a
third of its North American revenue. And business-class travel, which weakened
after the burst of the technology bubble and plummeted after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks, continues to strengthen. British Airways said its business-
and first-class traffic worldwide rose 1.7 percent in March and 13.3 percent in
April.
The timing of the two campaigns is significant:
Virgin Atlantic's advertising coincides with the final phasing in of its
improved "Upper Class," or business class, service. The airline began offering
this service in late 2003, and plans to make it available on all trans-Atlantic
flights by the end of the year. The service includes an upgraded seat, meals,
in-flight entertainment, and on-board spa and beauty treatments.
Mike Powell, an airline analyst with Dresdner
Kleinwort Wasserstein in London, said British Airways' campaign was intended in
part to respond to Virgin Atlantic's effort to win a greater share of the
lucrative business travel market.
"British Airways is well aware of the fact that it
doesn't have the market-leading trans-Atlantic business-class product," he said.
"It's trying to keep up with Virgin."
A British Airways spokeswoman said the carrier was
expected to announce plans next year "for new seats in business class." It was
British Airways that first introduced a business-class flat bed in 2000, an
innovation that has been widely copied.
Both airlines' campaigns are also meant to counter
increased trans-Atlantic service by United States airlines, Mr. Powell said.
Domestic airlines will increase their trans-Atlantic capacity by 7 percent
summer, while European airlines will increase theirs by only 3 percent,
according to Airline Business, a trade publication.
"British Airways and Virgin want to make sure the
additional capacity doesn't mean they lose premium market share," Mr. Powell
said. "They want to remind U.S. passengers there's a far better product in the
market" than that offered by American airlines, which he said were "unable to
invest in new aircraft and on-board products."
Virgin Atlantic's campaign, created by Crispin
Porter & Bogusky, is running in regional editions of magazines like Fortune,
Condé Nast Traveler and Newsweek. The agency designed a two-page,
black-and-white spread and boarding-card insert with flight details for 8 of its
16 flights.
The concept of naming flights is meant to restore
the "romance and elegance" of an earlier era of travel, when flights were also
named, said Jeff Steinhour, a managing partner at Crispin Porter & Bogusky. The
service out of Washington, D.C., is called "the diplomat," while its daytime
flight out of Newark is called "the wide-eye."
"We wanted to inject personality into individual
flights," Mr. Steinhour said.
To that end, the flights' Web sites show films that
describe each flight experience and provide details of meals and entertainment
offered on each.
The British Airways campaign, created by the New
York office of M&C Saatchi, with an online component by
agency.com,
a unit of the
Omnicom Group, is running
in magazines and on television, billboards and the Internet.
The TV ad - which will appear on the Golf Channel,
Bravo, Fox News and elsewhere - depicts a businessman reclining, in his New York
office, in a British Airways business-class seat. Invisible hands give him a
glass of champagne, canapés and a tissue to clean his glasses when he starts to
wipe them with his tie.
A magazine ad - running in publications like Forbes,
The New Yorker and The Economist - shows two limousine drivers in an airport
terminal, holding signs with the names of their arriving passengers and standing
next to a man clad in white. He is holding a white terry-cloth robe and a sign
with the name of a passenger - and is waiting to provide spa services.
The tagline on all the ads is: "Business class is
different on British Airways."
With this advertising, the airline has gone beyond
promoting its business-class flat beds, the focus of all recent campaigns geared
to business travelers. Instead, the campaign stresses that the airline
anticipates "what our customers look for when they travel," said Elizabeth
Weisser, British Airways' vice president of marketing for North America. "An
enormous number of other carriers have come into the marketplace with
flat-bed-type products similar to ours, and as a result, it was important for us
to differentiate ourselves."
J. Grant Caplan, a corporate travel management
consultant based in Houston, said the campaigns represented the British
airlines' chance "to help defeat companies like US Airways that are on the edge,
or to help further weaken other carriers like United and American."
Mr. Caplan predicted American business travelers
could switch to either British Airways or Virgin if the airlines can shake their
interest in their frequent flier programs. It will be easier to convert
executives whose employers do not control their travel-buying decisions as well
as infrequent travelers, who are not as vested in loyalty programs, he said.
JANE L. LEVERE, "Recalling When Flying Was an Elegant
Affair," The New York Times, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/fly0531
Up and Down on Tuition
Conventional wisdom has it that tuition rates will
go up every year at private colleges by a little more than the rate of
inflation. Some colleges struggling for enrollment will cut rates every now and
then, but the norm is a steady increase — but not too much in any one year. This
year, many leading private colleges are
announcing increases in
the 4-5 percent range.
Two private institutions this year, however, have
prepared for substantial changes in tuition policy for the next academic year.
The University of Richmond, which aspires to join the top ranks for private
colleges, is increasing total charges by 27 percent for freshmen, to $40,510,
effectively ending a longstanding policy of being thousands of dollars less
expensive than its competitors. (Current students will face only a 5 percent
increase and their base will be grandfathered while they are students.)
Roosevelt University, a Chicago institution that serves many nontraditional
students, is cutting tuition — and linking the cut to how many courses a student
takes, so that students have an incentive to take more courses and to graduate
sooner.
Data from the admissions and registration cycles
just completed suggest that both colleges are achieving some of the financial
and academic goals of their unconventional tuition policies. Richmond has
commitments from a comparably sized freshman class for the fall, despite its
huge tuition increase. And Roosevelt students have signed up for more courses in
the fall than in previous semesters. Officials at the two colleges say that
their experiences suggest the extent to which price does and does not influence
student choices.
Price Insensitivity at Richmond
William E. Cooper, the president at Richmond, says
he realizes that his university’s cost increase “superficially seems
outrageous.” But he said that he became convinced that Richmond “was about
$7,000 underpriced” and that the additional revenue would allow for more
financial aid and improvements in facilities and academic programs. “We could
dink around with this and ramp it up a little each year, but we decided it was
better to bite the bullet, to realign this and stay in place, rather than
looking confused.”
But what of student choices, and the widespread
public and political fear that high prices discourage students? With certain
student segments, that’s flat out false, Cooper says. Richmond found, he said,
that it was losing students to more expensive institutions and enrolling
students whose parents were willing to spend more than Richmond was charging.
“We were leaving money on the table,” Cooper says.
“We had all these people with a kid at Dartmouth or a kid at Syracuse, and a kid
here, and we were the cheap school.”
Cooper also rejects the idea that a low price can be
a recruiting tool. He acknowledges that Richmond probably picked up a few
students over the years who might have been too wealthy to qualify for financial
aid at a Duke or Vanderbilt or Emory, but who were attracted by the lower prices
at Richmond. “The question is, are they going to be there for us in the future”
as alumni donors? Cooper says. “They are too finely tuned to the financial,” he
says.
The results of the first admissions cycle suggest to
Cooper that the tuition increase worked. Final numbers will shift a bit as
Richmond gains or loses a few students due to other colleges’ wait list
decisions. But right now, 770 students have paid deposits to enroll as freshmen
in the fall, the same number as last year. Applications were down (to 5,779,
from a record 6,236). So the admissions rate rose (to 47 percent from 40
percent) and the yield — the percentage of admitted students who enroll — was
down a bit (to 28 percent from 31 percent). Minority enrollments appear down
slightly, to 12 percent from 13 percent.
But Cooper points out that measures of academic
quality didn’t change. Last year, the middle 50 percent of SAT scores was
1250-1390 and the average high school grade-point average was 3.52, and figures
from this year’s admitted class suggest that the figures will be almost
identical.
“There was bound to be a one-year shakeout,” Cooper
says of the drop in the number of applications, but the class entering is not
only as smart as the previous class, but appears to have many families that can
afford Richmond’s new rates and want to pay them.
“One of the strong philosophical bents of this
change was the price insensitivity of people who really care about higher
education,” Cooper says. “Just like people buy the best cappuccino maker if they
really care, so with higher education. If you really care, a couple thousand
bucks isn’t in the decision maker and that’s the student and family we want.”
Price and Graduation Rates at Roosevelt
At Roosevelt, the students aren’t necessarily buying
a lot of cappuccino makers. And enrollments have been healthy for the
institution, at about 7,500 head count, with 60 percent of students as
undergraduates, many of them working adults.
Mary E. Hendry, vice president for enrollment and
student services, says that the university’s problem is with graduation rates.
Currently only about 40 percent of students graduate within six years, and the
university would like to raise that proportion to 50 percent.
Hendry says that it is better for students and the
university if they move through the academic programs at a brisker pace. “We
decided to use tuition to encourage them to take more so they would graduate
within four years,” she says.
Historically, Roosevelt has charged tuition on a
per-credit basis, and for next year, the per-credit figure will go up 7.3
percent, to $755. But the university is setting special fees to discourage
students from taking almost enough courses to graduate on time, and to encourage
them to instead take enough to earn their degrees.
Students taking 12 credits a semester will be
charged at a rate that would equal $14,180 for a year, an increase of 10.2
percent over last year’s per-credit rate. But those who take 15 credits will be
charged the exact same amount for a year of courses, a decrease of 11.8 percent
in what students would have paid last year. (Students who take 16 credits will
pay a little more, but will also be paying 11.8 percent than in previous years.)
Typically, students register for about 30,000 credit
hours in a semester at Roosevelt. For the fall, the first semester under the new
plan, it appears that there will be an increase of 1,000 credit hours — while
enrollment is holding steady.
“I think this shows that we are reaching students,”
says Hendry. “We can use these policies to change graduation rates over the long
run.”
Scott Jaschik "Up
and Down on Tuition," Inside Higher Ed, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/tuition0531
Arthur Andersen conviction overturned
The Supreme Court on
Tuesday overturned the conviction of the Arthur Andersen accounting firm for
destroying Enron Corp.-related documents before the energy giant's collapse.
In a unanimous opinion, justices said the former Big
Five accounting firm's June 2002 conviction was improper.
The court said the jury instructions at trial were
too vague and broad for jurors to determine correctly whether Andersen
obstructed justice.
"The jury instructions here were flawed in important
respects," Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist wrote for the court.
The ruling is a setback for the Bush administration,
which made prosecution of white-collar criminals a high priority following
accounting scandals at major corporations.
After Enron's 2001 collapse, the Justice Department
went after Andersen first.
Enron crashed in December 2001, putting more than
5,000 employees out of work, just six weeks after the energy company revealed
massive losses and writedowns.
Subsequently, as the Securities and Exchange
Commission began looking into Enron's convoluted finances, Andersen put in
practice a policy calling for destroying unneeded documentation.
Government attorneys argued that Andersen should be
held responsible for instructing its employees to "undertake an unprecedented
campaign of document destruction."
"Arthur Andersen conviction overturned,"
Tuesday, May 31, 2005 Posted: 10:28 AM EDT (1428 GMT)
, CNN.com,
http://snipurl.com/aa0531
Photo from playboy-themed party grabs alumni's
attention
Photo From Playboy-Themed Party Grabs Alumni's
Attention Female High School Seniors Show Up Wearing Skimpy Lingerie
HOUSTON -- A racy photo from a high school
party with a Playboy theme has sent alumni of the school into shock, Houston
television station KPRC reported.
Some Memorial High School alumni told the station
the so-called "Playboy Party" went too far, saying the theme was too hot for
teens. However, students who attended the party disagree, saying it was all
clean fun.
"It doesn't put off the best impression. It doesn't
make me want my kids to go there," 1994 Memorial High graduate Sabra Boone said.
Boon said senior men throw a theme party that is not
sanctioned by the school. This year's theme was the Playboy mansion.
Parents are upset after a Playboy-themed party that
had girls dressing in revealing outfits.
While one student, who asked not to be identified,
told the station a dress code for the party was not established, some of the
girls showed up in skimpy lingerie.
Boone, along with other alumni, said she received a
picture from the party in an e-mail.
"Everyone is shocked," Boone said.
One parent, whose son attended the party, told the
station the senior boys tried hard to throw a fun, safe party, explaining it was
held at a private venue with chaperones and police. Attendees were required to
sign waivers promising not to drink alcohol.
Boone said girls wore formals to a similar party she
attended during her senior year. She told the station she is disappointed in
Memorial High School's 2005 senior class.
"Regardless, the girls are hardly wearing any
clothes. I just couldn't believe their parents would let them out of the house
like that," Boone said.
by
tuffydoodle "Photo
from playboy-themed party grabs alumni's attention,"
Free Republic, May 24, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/grdprty0531
'Deep Throat' Is Identified
Magazine Article Identifies Watergate Source
After more than 30 years of silence, the most
famous anonymous source in American history, Deep Throat, has identified himself
to a reporter at Vanity Fair.
W. Mark Felt, 91, an assistant director at the FBI
in the 1970s, has told reporter John D. O'Connor that he is "the man known as
Deep Throat."
O'Connor told ABC News in an interview today that
Felt had for years thought he was a dishonorable man for talking to Bob
Woodward, a reporter for The Washington Post during Watergate. Woodward's
coverage of the scandal, written with Carl Bernstein, led to the resignation of
President Nixon.
"Mark wants the public respect, and wants to be
known as a good man," O'Connor said. "He's very proud of the bureau, he's very
proud of the FBI. He now knows he is a hero."
The identity of Deep Throat, the source for details
about Nixon's Watergate cover-up, has been called the best-kept secret in the
history of Washington D.C., or at least in the history of politics and
journalism. Only four people were said to know the source's identity: Woodward;
Bernstein; Ben Bradlee, the former executive editor of the Post; and, of course,
Deep Throat himself.
Both Bradlee and Bernstein have refused to confirm
to ABC News that Felt is Deep Throat.
Woodward would also neither confirm nor deny the
report.
"There's a principle involved here," he told ABC
News. He and Bernstein promised not to reveal Deep Throat's identity until the
source dies.
Despite years of feelings of negativity and
ambivalence, O'Connor said, Felt's family has helped him realize that "he is a
hero" and "that it is good what he did."
In his 1979 book, "The FBI Pyramid: From the
Inside," Felt flat-out denied that he was the famous source.
"I would have done better," Felt told The Hartford
Courant in 1999. "I would have been more effective. Deep Throat didn't exactly
bring the White House crashing down, did he?"
Best-Kept Secret
Throughout the years, politicians and journalists
have guessed at Deep Throat's identity.
Contenders included Gen. Al Haig, who was a popular
choice for a long time, especially when he was running for president in 1988.
Haig was Nixon's chief of staff and secretary of state under President Reagan.
Woodward finally said publicly that Haig was not
Deep Throat. Other contenders mentioned frequently, besides Felt, included Henry
Kissinger; CIA officials Cord Meyer and William E. Colby; and FBI officials L.
Patrick Gray, Charles W. Bates and Robert Kunkel.
In "All the President's Men," the 1974 movie of the
Watergate scandal, Woodward and Bernstein described their source as holding an
extremely sensitive position in the executive branch.
The source was dubbed "Deep Throat" by Post managing
editor Howard Simons after the notorious porn film.
Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures, "'Deep Throat' Is
Identified," ABC News, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/DT0531
TIDBITS JUNE 1, 2005
Andersen Decision Is Bittersweet
For Ex-Workers
When former Arthur Andersen LLP
senior manager Bill Strathmann heard that the Supreme Court had overturned
Andersen's criminal conviction yesterday, he immediately relayed the news to his
wife, father, brother and friends. On an email chain including 17 former
Andersen partners and employees from Andersen's old Tysons Corner, Va., office,
terms like "three years too late," "vindication" and "unbelievable" were
sprinkled throughout.
While the damage has been done, Mr.
Strathmann, now chief executive of a nonprofit organization, said, "this
decision is still good for the legacy of Arthur Andersen."
In chat rooms, Web logs and emails
yesterday, many former employees voiced similar opinions about the Supreme
Court's unanimous decision to overturn the 2002 criminal conviction of Andersen
tied to its botched audits of Enron Corp. The court ruled that jurors used too
loose a standard of culpability against the once-venerable accounting firm.
Still, the Supreme Court's decision isn't likely to revive Arthur Andersen -- or
help former partners pull out their remaining capital any time soon.
The firm lost its license to practice
in Texas and some other states shortly after its June 2002 conviction, and by
the fall of 2002 had surrendered the rest of its licenses. Today, Andersen has
fewer than 200 employees, down from 85,000 world-wide before its fall. Most work
to wrap up lawsuits pending against the firm.
The accounting debacles at Enron and
WorldCom Inc., another Andersen client, have permanently etched a negative
perception of the firm in many people's minds. Among the most vivid images:
Workers in Andersen's Houston office shredding tons of documents connected to
long-valuable client Enron; or, months later, the news of WorldCom's collapse
into bankruptcy from an $11 billion accounting fraud, the nation's largest.
Still, the decision marks a win to
some former employees. In her Web log, Mary Trigiani, a communications
consultant in San Francisco who previously wrote speeches for Andersen
executives, typed yesterday: "This is an enormous vindication of the majority of
the people who embodied the vision and values of the venerable organization --
but not of the few managers who enabled Andersen's destruction."
In some ways, "a stigma has been
lifted," said Marc Andersen, a former Andersen partner who organized a
1,000-person rally in Washington in 2002 to protest the Justice Department
indictment.
For many, the ruling is bittersweet.
Douglas J. DeRito, a former partner in Andersen's Atlanta office, saw his career
derailed. He had invested $500,000 in the firm, where he worked for eight years,
to buy his partnership stake. "I've been through over two years of hell," said
Mr. DeRito, now an executive director with a small Atlanta firm. "We Andersen
partners worked a significant amount of our professional careers to get to the
level of partner," and then "the Justice Department took the carpet out from
under us." Andersen had about 1,700 partners in the U.S., some of whom had
invested as much as $3 million.
Because of a mountain of litigation
for the blowups at Enron and WorldCom, the pickings remain slim for ex-partners.
A stipulation in a recent $65 million settlement with investors of WorldCom (now
MCI Inc.) provides that the plaintiffs will receive 20% of any money remaining
in Andersen's coffers after other cases are settled. The Supreme Court's
decision seemingly does little to improve Andersen's standing in cases where the
firm is being sued for negligent audit work.
"Clearly the firm failed," said Barry
Melancon, president of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants,
which filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of Andersen. The vindication
is only that "the firm as a whole is not guilty in this situation."
DIYA GULLAPALLI, "Andersen Decision Is
Bittersweet For Ex-Workers," The Wall Street Journal,
June 1, 2005; Page A6,
http://snipurl.com/aa20601
A New Low Price For Broadband
SBC to Offer High-Speed Internet
Service for $14.95 a Month; Rivals Face Pressure to Follow
In an aggressive move to cut
the cost of high-speed Internet access, the nation's second-largest phone
company plans to start charging $14.95 a month for new customers -- making
broadband service less expensive than some dial-up plans.
The move by
SBC Communications Inc.,
announced today, may compel competitors to follow suit. Cable companies
currently dominate the high-speed business, but typically charge considerably
more for the service, often $40 or more a month. The basic broadband plan at
cable giant
Comcast Corp. for
instance, is $42.95. Traditionally, cable companies justify those prices by the
fact that their connections are among the fastest available -- as much as triple
the speed of a high-speed connection provided by a phone company like SBC. (Even
the slowest broadband connection is roughly 25 times as fast as dial-up.)
Analysts say SBC's move marks the
first time broadband service has been broadly offered at a significantly less
expensive rate than AOL's dial-up service. More than half of the 77 million U.S.
households with Internet access still use dial-up connections, such as
Time Warner Inc.'s AOL,
which charges $23.90 per month.
The SBC price cut comes as the telecom
industry is confronting sharply increased competition from cable-TV companies
and Internet start-ups. In addition, fast-changing technologies, such as
inexpensive Internet-based telephone services, are undercutting their
traditional phone business. Telcom companies have also seen a sharp decline of
their traditional local-phone business, as customers have begun using cellphones
and email. The industry has responded so far by consolidating, triggering $150
billion of mergers and acquisitions in the past 18 months.
Cable companies officials said
yesterday that they don't need to respond to price cuts by the phone companies
because they say cable broadband service is faster and more efficient than
telephone broadband service. "If price were the only thing that mattered to
everyone, we'd all be driving Yugos," says a spokesman for
Cox Communications Inc.,
the country's third-largest cable operator. (DSL service is basically a souped-up
phone line, whereas cable broadband is transmitted over the cable-TV network,
which has higher capacity than copper phone lines.)
But some analysts say the cable
industry may soon be forced to respond. "As broadband reaches deeper into the
mass market, the service needs to appeal to more price-sensitive customers,"
says Craig Moffett, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
SBC's offer is open to subscribers of
the company's local phone service in its 13-state service area, which includes
California, Texas and Connecticut. To be eligible, customers must sign up for
the plan online at www.sbc.com. SBC was already offering some of the lowest cost
broadband service available among large cable and telephone companies, at $19.95
a month.
With its price cut, SBC is essentially
in a land-grab mode, leaving the company more concerned with adding customers
than increasing broadband profitability. SBC declines to say whether its
broadband operations are profitable.
The company is seeking to broaden its
base of 5.6 million subscribers to its high-speed service, known as digital
subscriber line, or DSL. Signing up for DSL doesn't require that a customer have
a second phone line. However, in most cases it does require users to have at
least one phone-line subscription.
SBC's $14.95 offer isn't a temporary
promotion, the company says. Frequently, rivals have offered similarly low
prices, but mainly as temporary promotions that expired after a period of time.
Special Promotions
There are 34.5 million broadband
subscribers nationwide, a figure that analysts expect will nearly double in the
next four years.
The telecom companies have steadily
lowered prices on broadband service in the past two years, sometimes through
special promotions, in hopes of catching up to cable providers, which were the
first to offer broadband and maintain a substantial edge over DSL providers.
Currently, there are more than 21.1 million cable-broadband subscribers,
compared with about roughly 15 million DSL subscribers, though estimates vary.
The phone companies' tactic seems to
be working. In the first quarter of this year, of the 2.6 million new broadband
subscribers, 192,655 more turned to DSL over cable, according to Leichtman
Research Group Inc., a media-markets research firm based in Durham, N.C.
Television and Gaming
Broadband is all the more important
for phone companies such as SBC because new services that they are beginning to
offer, such as television and gaming, are increasingly going to run over the
companies' broadband networks. The more broadband customers phone companies
have, the more additional services they can sell to them down the road, the
logic goes. For instance, SBC is getting into the TV business in direct
competition with cable companies. Phone companies without large numbers of
broadband subscribers could find themselves without a sizable market for new
products and services.
"We're trying to expand the market for
broadband as much as we can," says Ed Cholerton, an SBC vice president of
consumer marketing for broadband.
DIONNE SEARCEY, "A New Low Price For
Broadband," The Wall Street Journal,
June 1, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/brdbnd0601
The New Post 9/11 Graduates -- Standing up for
Patriotism
Memorial Day has several different meanings for
Americans. For some, we were spending a weekend reflecting, reminiscing and
reminding ourselves about the sacrifices our family members, neighbors, and
fellow Americans made as soldiers for our nation. At the same time, many of us
were also focusing our attention on our children, nieces, nephews and for many,
our grandchildren who are preparing themselves to take the final walk across
their high school or college graduation stage.
One of the questions these new graduates have to be
pondering has to be "what nation and world are we graduating into"? For young
people it has to be fraught with some sense of peril. These post 9/11 graduates
are inheriting a nation that lived through the most vicious attack on our nation
since that horrible day of December 7th, 1941, when Pearl Harbor was bombed
without warning and without provocation.
This horrible event from so long ago can certainly
be a guide for the young graduates of today. I point purposely to this past
Memorial Day weekend, because it is at this time that families typically gather
around and share some very special moments with parents, grandparents and a host
of family and friends who pour through the family photos to point out perhaps
their now aged warriors of World War II. Perhaps they point to an uncle or
grandparent who did not return home to his native soil and now lies buried in a
U.S. cemetery on foreign soil
Perhaps, the family visited their local cemetery
where their father or uncle or even aunt or grandmother now lies buried, a
former soldier who served, who fought, and who sacrificed for their nation,
because it was the right thing to do...because it was the American thing to do.
Perhaps they visited a hospital with the soon to be
graduate and sat on the side of the bed with an aging grandparent or father who
was a soldier in the fox hole or perhaps a pilot or a tail gunner in one of the
flying fortresses from the Second World War. The parent's son or daughter may
have sat quietly and listened to stories spun from long buried memories of acts
of bravery, mixed with a little bit of fear, but a whole lot of courage. Maybe
the young adult son stood up and just as he was getting ready to leave his
hospital room, he turned and saluted his grandfather, and thanked him for his
gift to our nation, to his community and to his family.
Your daughter may have asked the question at the
backyard barbeque on Memorial Day, "What about women? " as she passed the photos
of the women in the family who also sacrificed during those tumultuous war
years. What did Grandmother Christina or Aunt Cynthia do when they were a Wave
or a WAC during World War II? In listening she probably learned that perhaps the
times her grandmother grew up in were not much different from the times now as
she is about to step across the graduation.
These young high school and college graduates also
remember hearing an American President make a steely firm declaration about
dealing with those who were responsible for bringing terror to our home shores.
They saw a determined President Bush seem to echo the words from another
generation...and spoken by another American President. The emotions of
patriotism ran high then on December 8, 1941, as President Franklin D. Roosevelt
said to a joint Session of Congress:
"Yesterday, December 7th, 1941 -- a date which will
live in infamy -- the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately
attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.
Japan has, therefore, undertaken a surprise
offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. The facts of yesterday and
today speak for themselves. The people of the United States have already formed
their opinions and well understand the implications to the very life and safety
of our nation.
No matter how long it may take us to overcome this
premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win
through to absolute victory.
I believe that I interpret the will of the Congress
and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the
uttermost, but will make it very certain that this form of treachery shall never
again endanger us."
Those graduates of 1945 heard those words and many
by the tens of thousands left high school or college and answered the call to
make those who attacked America pay for their treachery.
Sixty years later, the soon to be graduates are
remembering the fateful remarks from President Bush as he too addressed the
American public and comforted and rallied a nation that was also the victim of
an air attack.
President Bush as President Roosevelt before him
also addressed the nation, " Good evening. Today, our fellow citizens, our way
of life, our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate and deadly
terrorist acts. The victims were in airplanes, or in their offices; secretaries,
businessmen and women, military and federal workers; moms and dads, friends and
neighbors. Thousands of lives were suddenly ended by evil, despicable acts of
terror.
A great people has been moved to defend a great
nation. Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest buildings,
but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts shattered steel, but
they cannot dent the steel of American resolve.
Some of our greatest moments have been acts of
courage for which no one could have ever prepared.
We cannot know every turn this battle will take. Yet
we know our cause is just and our ultimate victory is assured. We will, no
doubt, face new challenges. But we have our marching orders: My fellow
Americans, let's roll. "
So you see, the young people in America from two
different generations share a common thread. That is the common thread of
freedom and of patriotism. These young people who you may have thought were not
listening or paying attention to you as you pored through those photo albums and
pointed out the family members in uniform who smiled back through the ages at
you... were listening
These young graduates are, according to a recent CBS
report, ditching over three decades of "Me'ism" and sensing a true obligation to
give something back to their nation. So this post 9/11 generation is listening
to the clarion call beating loudly within their own heart for helping their
nation.
These young people are pausing to examine what
exactly their obligation is to improving, to bettering, to protecting and to
standing up for advancing our nation, and that is honorable and commendable.
They are not doing what others have done
before...holding their hand outstretched and asking..."How much are you going to
pay me first."
Hopefully those narrow self-absorbed Neanderthals
are dying off in America. You know the ones, and hopefully you didn't raise one.
These are the selfish non-patriots...who merely turn their head and leave the
seriousness of defending the nation and making the world free for Democracy to
"those patsies and saps" because it is after all...someone else's' job.
But that's fine, because like Revolutionary War hero
Samuel Adams said: "If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of
servitude better than the animating contest for freedom, go home and leave us in
peace. We seek not your council nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand
that feeds you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen."
Patriotism is making a comeback with the post-9/11
graduates and they like their grandparents before them may truly become the next
Greatest Generation.
Kevin Fobbs,
"The
New Post 9/11 Graduates -- Standing up for Patriotism,"
Free Republic, June 1, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/grads0601
Can Rev. Al be Limbaugh's air apparent?
Could there be any odder couple than Rush Limbaugh and
Al Sharpton? Not if I have anything to do with it.
Last week - after Matrix Media announced a deal for
Sharpton to host a "Limbaugh of the Left"-type talk radio show - the
conservative radio star said he'll think about mentoring the minister in the
finer points of the medium.
Yesterday, Sharpton contacted me to say he's eager
to accept the sort-of offer to (as Limbaugh put it on his own show Friday) "let
[Sharpton] guest-host the program for, like, 30 minutes at a time while I am
sitting here critiquing him."
Sharpton told me: "I was a little surprised, but I'm
willing to take him up on his speculative offer. I think it would be
interesting. It would be something that both of us can learn from. He can learn
some of the thoughts of the left, and I can learn some of the techniques of the
right. Let's see if he's serious."
(Excerpt) Read more at
nydailynews.com ...
Pikamax, "Can
Rev. Al be Limbaugh's air apparent?," Free
Republic, 06/01/2005,
http://snipurl.com/rlal0601
[The article below reads just like
"Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand---Debbie]
Dairy gets squeezed by the feds
In its 85 years of existence, Smith Brothers Dairy in
Kent has survived all manner of misfortune and mistakes.
There was the Depression, when milk sales plummeted.
There were cow-killing floods. There were modern times, when it appeared the
old-fashioned idea of fresh milk delivered to the doorstep had died.
And there was the crackdown when society realized
cow manure could be as toxic to fish as anything produced at a nuclear plant.
"None of that compares to this," says Alexis Smith
Koester, 60, dairy president and granddaughter of the founder, Ben Smith. "This
is the biggest threat we've ever faced."
She's talking about the federal government.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has proposed new
rules that could force Smith Brothers to either give up half its business or
close up shop entirely, Koester says.
What are the feds trying to stop? They're trying to
keep Smith Brothers Dairy from selling its milk for less.
And we call this a capitalist country.
The dairy, which is small enough that the president
answered the phone when I called, is being punished for doing too much too well.
For 75 years, milk has been heavily regulated by
price and marketing controls.
People who know more about it than I do say the
system works well. It protects those who own only one part of the milk business
— say, a farmer with cows but no milk-processing plant — from being gouged by
big agribusinesses.
But Smith Brothers has always been exempt from these
regulations because it is so independent. It does it all. It is one of only 11
dairies left in the Northwest that raise and milk the cows as well as pasteurize
and bottle the milk.
Its business model is so antiquated that most
dairies like it long since went under.
Smith Brothers survived by discovering that what was
old is new again. Home delivery of milk is hot. Especially if people know who
owns the cows so there's a guarantee no growth hormones were used.
Remarkably, Smith Brothers now delivers milk to
40,000 homes in and around Seattle, the most in its history. And it is so
efficient it does so at the same or lower prices you get in many stores.
Yet the feds, backed by the biggest dairy processors
in the West, want to force Smith Brothers and other do-it-yourself dairies to
sell through the government-regulated system. They say this will help the small
farmers who already sell milk to big processors.
But Smith Brothers, no milk monopoly with just 1
percent of the market, would have to pay subsidies to its competitors that
exceed the dairy's yearly profit. Or it would have to break up its business, and
no longer provide its unique cow-to-carton-to-doorstep service.
So what we have is the government, prodded by large
corporations, saying it is helping small family farms by destroying one of our
most successful small family farms.
Come to think of it, I guess that is American-style
capitalism after all.
Danny Westneat,
"Dairy
gets squeezed by the feds," Free Republic (from The Seattle Times),
June 3, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/dairy0601
BMG Cracks Piracy Whip
NEW YORK -- As part of
its mounting U.S. rollout of content-enhanced and copy-protected CDs, Sony BMG
Music Entertainment is testing technology solutions that bar consumers from
making additional copies of burned CD-R discs.
Since March the company has released at least 10
commercial titles -- more than 1 million discs in total -- featuring technology
from U.K. anti-piracy specialist First4Internet that allows consumers to make
limited copies of protected discs, but blocks users from making copies of the
copies.
The concept is known as "sterile burning." And in
the eyes of Sony BMG executives, the initiative is central to the industry's
efforts to curb casual CD burning.
"The casual piracy, the school yard piracy, is a
huge issue for us," says Thomas Hesse, president of global digital business for
Sony BMG. "Two-thirds of all piracy comes from ripping and burning CDs, which is
why making the CD a secure format is of the utmost importance."
Names of specific titles carrying the technology
were not disclosed. The effort is not specific to First4Internet. Other Sony BMG
partners are expected to begin commercial trials of sterile burning within the
next month.
To date, most copy protection and other digital
rights management-based solutions that allow for burning have not included
secure burning.
Early copy-protected discs as well as all Digital
Rights Management-protected files sold through online retailers like iTunes,
Napster and others offer burning of tracks into unprotected WAV files. Those
burned CDs can then be ripped back onto a personal computer minus a DRM wrapper
and converted into MP3 files.
Under the new solution, tracks ripped and burned
from a copy-protected disc are copied to a blank CD in Microsoft's Windows Media
Audio format. The DRM embedded on the discs bars the burned CD from being
copied.
"The secure burning solution is the sensible way
forward," First4Internet CEO Mathew Gilliat-Smith says. "Most consumers accept
that making a copy for personal use is really what they want it for. The
industry is keen to make sure that is not abused by making copies for other
people that would otherwise go buy a CD."
As with other copy-protected discs, albums featuring
XCP, or extended copy protection, will allow for three copies to be made.
However, Sony BMG has said it is not locked into the
number of copies. The label is looking to offer consumers a fair-use replication
of rights enjoyed on existing CDs.
A key concern with copy-protection efforts remains
compatibility.
It is a sticking point at Sony BMG and other labels
as they look to increase the number of copy-protected CDs they push into the
market.
Among the biggest headaches: Secure burning means
that iPod users do not have any means of transferring tracks to their device,
because Apple Computer has yet to license its FairPlay DRM for use on
copy-protected discs.
As for more basic CD player compatibility issues,
Gilliat-Smith says the discs are compliant with Sony Philips CD specifications
and should therefore play in all conventional CD players.
The moves with First4Internet are part of a larger
copy-protection push by Sony BMG that also includes SunnComm and its MediaMax
technology.
To date, SunnComm has been the music giant's primary
partner on commercial releases -- including Velvet Revolver's
Contraband and Anthony Hamilton's solo album. In all, more than 5.5
million content-enhanced and protected discs have been shipped featuring
SunnComm technology.
First4Internet's XCP has been used previously on
prerelease CDs only. Sony BMG is the first to commercially deploy XCP.
First4Internet's other clients -- which include
Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and EMI -- are using XCP for
prerelease material.
Sony BMG expects that by year's end a substantial
number of its U.S. releases will employ either MediaMax or XCP. All
copy-protected solutions will include such extras as photo galleries, enhanced
liner notes and links to other features.
Reuters, "BMG Cracks Piracy Whip,"
Wired News, 03:00 PM May. 31, 2005 PT,
http://snipurl.com/bmg0601
Taking a Load Off While You Drive
As you pack your bags to hit the road this weekend,
don't forget the swimsuit, sun block and driving directions. And hit the loo
before you buckle up because record numbers of Americans will be right there
with you heading out on vacation. Or you could do as some Brits do and pack a
portable toilet to use in the car.
Two British engineers have invented the Indipod, an
inflatable in-car toilet powered by a cigarette lighter. After plugging into the
car's lighter, the bubble toilet or "private sanitary sanctuary" inflates to an
area about 4 feet high and 3 feet wide and is sufficient to accommodate two
people. When not in use, the portable toilet folds away into a bag the size of a
suitcase and weighs 22 pounds.
"We are on the road a lot and built one for
ourselves and actually used it as we were developing it," said James Shippen,
inventor and co-founder of the Indipod. Their 15 prototypes led to the
masterpiece, which works best in SUVs or minivans.
End to Long Bathroom Queues
Launched last November in Britain, the
toilet-on-the-go is available online for $376, not including shipping.
"Originally in the United States, we sold these for
people with medical conditions like Chron's disease," Shippen said, "but a lot
of families are inquiring about them now."
Chron's disease is a progressive, inflammatory
disease of the bowel. The most common symptoms are diarrhea and pain, which
means unpredictable and frequent pit stops.
But getting to a satisfactory pit stop on the road
can be a trying experience for anyone. Hygiene in run-down, badly lit truck
stops leaves a lot to be desired along the nation's busy highways. Most women's
facilities have endless lines and the smelly stalls have most people gasping for
fresh air as they zip up.
So if you are on the go this summer, the Indipod Web
site claims there's no need to twist yourself in knots counting down the miles
before finding relief, "the Indipod will keep you on course."
Don't Let Your Bladder Do the Driving
With Memorial Day marking the unofficial start of
the summer driving season, motorists may be complaining about rising prices at
the pump but it's not keeping them home. AAA estimates that approximately 31.1
million travelers (84 percent of all holiday travelers) expect to travel by
motor vehicle this weekend, a 2.2 percent increase from the 30.5 million who
drove a year ago.
Overall, 37.2 million Americans will travel 50 miles
or more from home this holiday, a slight increase from a year ago. Shippen hopes
to find some new customers among these driving droves.
"There's usually a giggle factor when people hear about our loo but
often those same people become our customers saying, 'I could use one of those,'
" said Shippen, remarking on the numerous "dirty" jokes he's gotten about the
toilet-on-the-go.
The unit doesn't come with a seat belt so Shippen
advises hitting the brakes and parking before you "unload." In 30 seconds, your
loo's hygiene bubble inflates and you climb in. The others in the car cannot see
you.
An air fan supposedly keeps bathroom noises and
odors sealed in but air fresheners may also be a good investment. If the long
road beckons and you want to stay on course, the Indipod can handle eight
visitors in one day or one person for eight days or two people for four days.
Road-Tested and Approved
Shippen and co-founder Barbara May road tested their
invention themselves recently by driving across Europe from north to south.
"We traveled 2,200 miles in just over a week and
never left the car at all," he said.
Food and their trusty toilet got them from Scotland
to the boot of Italy. They stopped at gas stations to fill up their tank and at
campsites to "de-fuel" their Indipod.
The duo plans to test their car "port-a-pottie" in
the wide expanse of the United States this year by driving cross-country from
New York to San Diego.
Their car port-a-pottie will certainly get lots of
use, although it may discourage any notion of car-pooling. And before hitting
the road with the Indipod, there is one more critical item to remember to take
along -- toilet paper.
CHARLOTTE SECTOR, "Taking a Load Off While You Drive,"
ABC News (Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures),
May. 27, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/load0601
Music: Standing Outside the
Fire ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/fire.htm
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
The Bible teaches us to love our
enemies as much as our friends. Probably, because they are the same persons.
Vittorio De Sica
The point is not to humanize war but to
abolish it.
Albert Einstein
Latest research on the
prevention of migraines ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/20/books/20almo.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1119277109-CQDv0S+2I88Z5Qgo+mTT1w
Tax-friendly versus Tax-unfriendly states in 2005 ---
http://money.cnn.com/2005/04/08/real_estate/tax_friendly/index.htm
Top honors go to the tax-friendly states of Alaska, New Hampshire and
Delaware.
Most unfriendly? Maine, New York, D.C.
Every year, the Tax Foundation
measures the total tax bill for each state, creating a list
of the most – and least – tax-friendly states in the
country.
See the full list
here. And see
more state rankings based on
income tax, sales tax, property tax and tax breaks for
retirees.
In creating its rankings, the Tax
Foundation measures as a percentage of per capita income
what residents pay in income, property, sales and other
personal taxes levied at the state and local levels. It also
factors in the portion of business taxes passed along to
state residents through higher prices, lower wages or lower
profits.
The Tax Foundation is a
nonpartisan, nonprofit policy research group that advocates,
among other things, tax simplification. |
|
Sleepless in Seattle University: The high cost of gourmet caffeine
addiction
Lim’s ideas led to the creation of a Web site
(completely independent of Seattle University) that allows people to determine
the long-term financial impact of their coffee habits. Gourmet coffee can cost
people thousands of dollars a year, an expense that goes up if you factor in
interest on student loans, which already tops six figures for plenty of graduate
and professional students.
Scott Jaschik, "Do You Really Need That Latte?" Inside Higher Ed, June 21, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/21/coffee
See Erika Lim's site at
http://www.hughchou.org/calc/coffee.cgi
In protest of the phony hearings on education in
Kansas
Dr. Miller is a professor of biology at
Brown University, a co-author of widely used high school and
college biology texts, an ardent advocate of the teaching of
evolution - and a person of faith. In another of his books,
"Finding Darwin's God," he not only outlines the scientific
failings of creationism and its doctrinal cousin, "intelligent
design," but also tells how he reconciles his faith in God with
his faith in science. But Dr. Miller declined to testify.
And he was not alone. Mainstream scientists, even those who have
long urged researchers to speak with a louder voice in public
debates, stayed away from Kansas. In general, they offered
two reasons for the decision: that the outcome of the hearings
was a foregone conclusion, and that participating in them would
only strengthen the idea in some minds that there was a serious
debate in science about the power of the theory of evolution.
"We on the science side of things strong-armed the Kansas
hearings because we realized this was not a scientific exchange,
it was a political show trial," said Eugenie Scott, director of
the National Center for Science Education, which promotes the
teaching of evolution. "We are never going to solve it by
throwing science at it."
Cornelia Dean, "Opting Out in the Debate on Evolution,"
The
New York Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/21/science/21evo.html
China's lingering muffled silence of state censorship
It is the sort of horrific case that in
many countries would be a national scandal but in China has
disappeared into the muffled silence of state censorship. That
silence matches the silence at the heart of the case: the fact
that students considered a teacher so powerful that they did not
dare speak out.
Jim Yardley, "Rape in China: A 3-Month-Long Nightmare for 26
Schoolgirls," The New York Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ChinaRape
LA Times experiment in non-censorship lasts less
than two days
A Los Angeles Times experiment in
opinion journalism lasted just two days before the paper was
forced to shut it down Sunday morning after some readers
repeatedly posted obscene photos.
Alicia C. Shepard, "Postings of Obscene Photos End Free-Form
Editorial Experiment," The New York Times, June 21, 2005
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/21/business/media/21paper.html
Admission of guilt will be costly for KPMG and its tax
clients
The admission last week by the big
accounting firm KPMG of "unlawful conduct" in selling tax
shelters may help shield the firm from criminal indictment, but
it heightens its vulnerability to costly civil litigation.
KPMG's acknowledgment, in which it said it "takes full
responsibility" and "deeply regrets" tax shelter abuses, may
also undermine some fellow corporate defendants in civil
lawsuits: businesses that worked with the accounting firm to
sell and operate the tax shelters and that now potentially face
hundreds of millions of dollars in claims.
Jeff Bailey and Lynnley Browning, "KPMG May Dodge One Bullet,
Only to Face Another," The New York Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/21/business/21kpmg.html?
Bob Jensen's threads on the two faces of KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#KPMG
Big Four Audit Firms Are Chided in Britain
A new auditing regulator in Britain
said yesterday that it had found problems in some audits
conducted by the Big Four accounting firms, reflecting a failure
to apply proper procedures. It said it had discovered two
audited companies that it believed had not complied with all
rules. "The firms are capable of doing very good audits," Paul
George, director of the Professional Oversight Board for
Accountancy, said yesterday in a telephone interview. "But we
identify some areas where they are not applying their procedures
and practices across all audits."
Floyd Norris, "Big Four Audit Firms Are Chided in Britain,"
The New York Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/21/business/worldbusiness/21audit.html
The Decline of Socialism in America
Many people know that
(James) Weinstein’s book The Decline of
Socialism in America, 1912-1925 (first published in 1967 and
reprinted by Rutgers University Press in 1984) started out as
his dissertation. After all this time, it remains a landmark
work in the scholarship on U.S. radicalism. But only this
weekend, in talking with a mutual friend, did I learn that he
never actually bothered to get the Ph.D. While
hospitalized with brain cancer, Jimmy gave a series of
interviews to Miles Harvey, an author and former managing editor
at In These Times. The body of reminscences is now being
transcribed, and will join the collection of the
Oral History Research Office at
Columbia University.
Scott McLemee, "Ambiguous Legacy," Inside Higher Ed, June
21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/21/mclemee
In Chess, Masters Again Fight Machines
But, rather than being the final word in the battle of
man vs. machine, the Kasparov-Deep Blue match spurred the competition. More
grandmasters are taking up the challenge posed by computers.
Dylan Loeb McClain, " In Chess, Masters Again Fight Machines," The New York
Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/21/arts/21mast.html
Rumplestiltskin is running out of straw: Tech companies are hoarding gold
and not replacing the straw that is spun into gold
That cash hoard is likely to grow this year, as
companies take advantage of a one-time federal tax break that will allow them to
repatriate billions of dollars in overseas earnings. FIXED-INCOME MENTALITY. The
trouble is, few tech companies are doing anything exciting with all that loot.
Many chief executives are using their funds sparingly. Several years after the
tech bust ended, they're still unnerved by weak revenue growth and a stagnant
stock market. So they're playing it safe, behaving like well-off retirees who
clip coupons and live off the interest of their nest eggs. With the tech
downturn still fresh in their minds, relatively few business leaders have
regained the sense of boldness that goes hand in hand with making advances in
new technologies, products, and markets. "If tech companies were going to do
something big with their cash, they would have done it already," says Pip
Coburn, tech strategist at UBS.
Steve Rosenbush, "Tech's Idle Billions: The sector's companies are minting
money. Now they need to start spending some to create new technologies,
products, and markets," Business Week, June 21, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/IdleCash
June 22, 2005 distance education message from
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
I just spent four days with around 350 accounting
faculty at PwC University for Faculty, which took place at the Harrison
Conference Center & Hotel in Plainsboro, NJ. The learning activities really
took me out of my comfort zone, and I learned a lot. I was teaching online
while I was there (there were internet connections in the rooms), and I
posted my takeaways each night on the discussion boards.
See
http://www.business.uconn.edu/users/adunbar/PwC_University_for_Faculty-2005.pdf
I edited my postings for this summary. The typos
just had to go; at least I tried to get rid of them. ;-) I hope PwC offers
this opportunity for faculty next summer. If you have the opportunity to
attend, go!
Amy Dunbar
University of Connecticut
School of Business
Accounting Department
2100 Hillside Road, Unit 1041
Storrs, CT 06269-1041
Jensen Comment: Amy is a veteran online teacher for the University
of Connecticut ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q4.htm#Dunbar
Breakthrough Isolating Embryo-quality Stem Cells From Blood
Professor Josef Käs and Dr Jochen Guck from the
University of Leipzig have developed a procedure that can extract and isolate
embryo-quality stem cells from adult blood for the first time. This new
technique could unlock the stem cell revolution and stimulate a boom in medical
research using stem cells. Stem cells are cells which have not yet
differentiated into specialised tissues such as skin, brain or muscle. They
promise a new class of regenerative medicine, which could repair apparently
permanent damage such as heart disease or Parkinson’s. The cells are currently
taken from aborted human foetuses, an issue which has led to controversy and
opposition in many parts of the world. Any alternative source, such as voluntary
adult donations, could spark a boom in new cures.
"Breakthrough Isolating Embryo-quality Stem Cells From Blood," Science Daily,
June 19, 2005 ---
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/06/050619115816.htm
Postdoctoral Mentoring Program
Research can be unforgiving in its time consumption,
but well rounded faculty members also teach, design courses, and mentor
students. In order to help multidimensional faculty members, Lawrence University
began a pilot program to mold postdoctoral fellows for successful careers. This
month, the university announced its selection of the first eight Lawrence
Fellows in the Liberal Arts and Sciences, who will begin the two-year program
next fall. Not all of the details are worked out, but the program will seek to
supply the fellows with plenty of mentoring to aid their teaching and course
design, and will require them to be mentors to undergraduates along the way.
While many research universities have postdoctoral fellows, Lawrence officials
see their program as significant for its scope — from the music conservatory to
the physics department — within a primarily undergraduate liberal arts
institution. And Lawrence is bringing in an administrator to study the new
program and make adjustments as needed so the eager young professors can have
tailor-made training.
David Epstein, "Faculty Farm Team," Inside Higher Ed, June 20, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/20/lawrence
The University of Missouri at Kansas
City has placed on administrative leave a dean who admitted plagiarizing
portions of a commencement speach, reported the Associated Press.
Inside Higher Ed, June 20, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/20/qt
Wisconsin colleges to be blocked from prescribing or
dispensing an emergency contraception pill
The Wisconsin Assembly approved a bill last week that
would bar student health centers on all University of Wisconsin campuses from
advertising, prescribing or dispensing an emergency contraception pill. The
“morning after” pill, which is designed for women to take when condoms break or
other forms of birth control somehow fail, provides a very high dose of
progestin that prevents ovulation or fertilization, effectively ending any
possibility of a pregnancy.
Doug Lederman, "Taking Aim at Student Sex," Inside Higher Ed, June 20,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/20/morning
Competition dwindles among international auditing firms
Intel Corp. is one of the many big companies now
bumping up against the limitations. After using Ernst & Young LLP as its auditor
for more than three decades, the semiconductor maker considered switching
recently for a fresh look at its financials. But it stuck with Ernst after
receiving proposals from the other Big Four firms: Deloitte & Touche LLP, KPMG
and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. That is because federal regulations bar the
three other firms from serving as Intel's independent auditor unless they give
up valuation, computer-software and other work they do for Intel. "Because there
are only a limited number of large multinational audit firms that do the kind of
work that we need, if we were to switch audit firms, all sorts of dominos would
fall," said Cary Klafter, corporate secretary at Intel.
Diya Gullapalli, "Firms' Auditor Choices Dwindle," The Wall Street Journal,
June 21, 2005; Page C1---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111931731386164848,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
From Jim Mahar's blog on June 18,
2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
A look around at a few blogs I have not done one of these look around pieces
in a while, so why not?
Freakonomics has an update on the discussion from the book on real estate
agents. If you have not read/ristened to the book, in the book Levitt points out
a study that finds that real estate agents behave differently when selling their
own homes than when they are selling homes for clients. SHOCK! It now seems that
the National Association of Realtors is upset. (SHOCK!)^2
Cafe Hayek directs us to a great Thomas Sowell article on Free trade and the
Smoot-Hawley tariff.
The
Marginal Revolution has an interesting article on musician Shayan, who is
selling shares in himself. Uh, ok. At what point will the SEC halt it?
SportsEconomist has
a cool piece on public vs. private financing of stadiums. Short version public
financing is generally not good. The Sports Economist
FreeMoney
Finance points to an article about the difficulty that Muslim homebuyers face
when it comes to mortgages. (if you want more on this, check out my Islamic
Finance Page.)
PFblog reports
that there are now an estimated 7.7 million millionaires. (warning, you have to
look through all the ads to find the story!)
Kimsnider's Investment Intelligence touts the benefits of laddered bond
portfolios.
One review of the new book 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America, by
Bernard Goldberg (HarperCollins,
0060761288)
---
http://snipurl.com/Goldberg
No preaching. No pontificating. Just some uncommon
sense about the things that have made this country great -- and the culprits
who are screwing it up.
Bernard Goldberg takes dead aim at the America
Bashers (the cultural elites who look down their snobby noses at "ordinary"
Americans) ... the Hollywood Blowhards (incredibly ditzy celebrities who
think they're smart just because they're famous) ... the TV Schlockmeisters
(including the one whose show has been compared to a churning mass of
maggots devouring rotten meat) ... the Intellectual Thugs (bigwigs at some
of our best colleges, whose views run the gamut from left wing to far left
wing) ... and many more.
Goldberg names names, counting down the villains in
his rogues' gallery from 100 all the way to 1 -- and, yes, you-know-who is
number 37. Some supposedly "serious" journalists also made the list,
including the journalist-diva who sold out her integrity and hosted one of
the dumbest hours in the history of network television news. And there are
those famous miscreants who have made America a nastier place than it ought
to be -- a far more selfish, vulgar, and cynical place.
But Goldberg doesn't just round up the usual
suspects we have come to know and detest. He also exposes some of the people
who operate away from the limelight but still manage to pull a lot of
strings and do all sorts of harm to our culture. Most of all, 100 People Who
Are Screwing Up America is about a country where as long as anything goes,
as one of the good guys in the book puts it, sooner or later everything will
go.
Exposing doctors who peddle snake oil
Klatz and Goldman first sued Olshansky and Perls last
fall, but the case was dismissed in the spring, according to Olshansky. The new
case is a modified version of the original. Olshansky said he has received
strong personal support from many colleagues, and that he will not stop speaking
out. “We will not be intimidated,” he said. “This is the pursuit of a scientific
issue by scientists. I am a professor of public health and that’s part of what I
do. I will continue to speak freely for the rest of my life.”
"Anti-Aging Doctors Sue Professors," Inside Higher Ed, June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/21/suit
Civil War Era Grips Tintype Rebel
During the Civil War, tintype photography was a cheap,
popular method of portraiture for common Americans and soldiers. In fact,
Abraham Lincoln produced gem-sized tintype pins for his 1860 presidential
campaign. For years, Coffer made his living taking wet-plate photographs of
Civil War re-enactors and people on the street, whom he'd dress in 19th-century
clothing. Coffer would sell a 5- by 7-inch portrait for "a mere $15." "The
market would stand for no higher price," wrote Coffer in response to several
questions sent by postal mail.
Alison Strayhan, "Civil War Era Grips Tintype Rebel," Wired News, June
14, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67838,00.html
China's lingering muffled silence of state censorship
It is the sort of horrific case that in many countries
would be a national scandal but in China has disappeared into the muffled
silence of state censorship. That silence matches the silence at the heart of
the case: the fact that students considered a teacher so powerful that they did
not dare speak out.
Jim Yardley, "Rape in China: A 3-Month-Long Nightmare for 26 Schoolgirls,"
The New York Times, June 21, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ChinaRape
The gap between poor and rich in the U.S. has widened over the past 30
years
The gap between poor and rich in the U.S. has widened
over the past 30 years. But people born to modest circumstances are no more
likely to rise above their parents' station. The divergent fates of Mr. Hall and
his stepson -- and others in this blue-collar city -- illustrate why it can be
hard to move up. Industrial jobs that offered steady escalators of advancement
for workers, even if they were only high-school graduates, are vanishing in
America. In their place are service-economy jobs with fewer ways up. Unions are
scarcer and temporary work more common. In newer service jobs that have come to
dominate the U.S. economy, a college diploma is increasingly the prerequisite to
a good wage. While increased access to college has been a powerful force for
mobility, the share of workers with college degrees remains a minority.
Moreover, getting a degree is closely correlated with having parents who
themselves went to college.
Greg Ip, "As Economy Shifts, A New Generation Fights to Keep Up: In
Milwaukee, Factories Close And Skills, Not Seniority, Are Key to Advancement,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 22, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111939582597865857,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Major TV Networks (except for Fox) Boycotted 'Hospital Bomber' Story
That only one network would air incredible footage of
the seizure of a ticking human-bomb, just moments before she tried to murder
hospital patients, means this story was not simply ignored by the mainstream
media - it was boycotted by the mainstream media. Since nearly every aspect of
this remarkable story contradicts everything the mainstream media has been
trying to tell us about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, they just opted for
the easiest way to handle it - denying it ever happened.
"Bauer: Major TV Networks Boycotted 'Hospital Bomber' Story," Arutz Sheva,
June 22, 2005 ---
http://www.arutzsheva.com/news.php3?id=84394
Also see
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1428321/posts
Stranger than fiction
Forwarded by Barb Hessel (from Fox News)
Lions Save African Girl From Abductors ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,160265,00.html
Also stranger than fiction
M’Mburugu had a machete in one hand but dropped that to
thrust his fist down the leopard’s mouth. He gradually managed to pull out the
animal’s tongue, leaving it in its death-throes. “It let out a blood-curdling
snarl that made the birds stop chirping,” he told the daily Standard newspaper
of how the leopard came at him and knocked him over. The leopard sank its teeth
into the farmer’s wrist and mauled him with its claws. “A voice, which must have
come from God, whispered to me to drop the panga (machete) and thrust my hand in
its wide-open mouth. I obeyed,” M’Mburugu said.
"Kenyan, 73, kills leopard with bare hands," MSNBC, June 22, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8317484/
Music: Sugar Shack ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/shack.htm
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
The press does not want to inform the
reader but to persuade him he's being informed.
Nicolás Dávila
Citigroup's criminal behavior is so
far-flung and ambidextrous it seems to be part of the profit structure.
William Greider
Don't worry about the world coming to
an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia.
Charles M. Schulz
What banks are not telling us following the hacking of 50
million credit card numbers
Consumer advocates said credit card customers have
been denied crucial information in the wake of a recent data breach, as some
major banks are declining to tell cardholders whether their account may have
been accessed by hackers . . . Within 24 hours of last week's news of the
breach, a new version of an Internet scam was circulating on the Web. In an
e-mail forged to look as if it had come from MasterCard, recipients were urged
to log in to a counterfeited MasterCard site and enter their account
information.
Mike Musgrove, "Cardholders Kept in Dark After Breach Some Banks
Decline to Tell Customers Whether Accounts Were Compromised," The Washington
Post, June 23, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/22/AR2005062202037.html?referrer=email
Jensen Comment: I changed all of the account numbers on my credit cards.
I suggest that you do the same.
Consumer Health Websites
"Consumer Reports WebWatch, an arm of the Consumers Union publishing empire, has
begun rating the 20 most-trafficked health information Web sites. The ratings --
posted on a new early release Web site,
http://www.healthratings.org / , that was
undergoing evident birthing pains last week-- were produced in collaboration
with the Health Improvement Institute (HII), a Bethesda-based nonprofit."
Leslie Walker, "Consumer Health Websites," The Washington Post,
June 21, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2005/06/20/DI2005062001043.html?referrer=email
This is a good article
Arthritis is crippling more people, but there are nine key ways to beat the pain
---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/health/articles/050627/27arthritis.htm
June 23, 2005 message from Richard Campbell
I thought the following multimedia presentation may
be of interest to many on the list - The presentation itself was created
using Articulate's Presenter.
http://www.presenternet.com/robingood/player.html?slide=1
Richard J. Campbell
mailto:campbell@rio.edu
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology tools are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
MSN Search introduces Spoof, a tool to
let you create funny search results about a friend, family member, or co-worker.
When you're done, you can send the page to the target or anyone else you think
might get a laugh out of it. ---
http://www.msnsearchspoof.com/index.aspx
Your phone company is lobbying to prevent competition
SBC Communications Inc., the dominant phone company in
Texas, and other big phone companies say that cities should not be allowed to
subsidize high-speed Internet connections -- even in areas where the companies
don't yet offer the service. Since January, lawmakers in at least 14 states and
the U.S. Congress have introduced bills to restrict local governments' ability
to fill the gap.
Jesse Crucker and Li Yuan, "Phone Giants Are Lobbying Hard To Block Towns'
Wireless Plans: As Cities Try to Build Networks, SBC and Other Companies
Say It's Unfair Competition," The Wall Street Journal, June 23,
2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111948429964367053,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
A poem by Mary Fister for those who must endure long and formal faculty
meetings ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/24/fister
I have to disagree with John Wilson on this one
In what may be the worst decision for college student
rights in the history of the federal judiciary, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit this week turned back the clock a half-century and
reinstated the old discredited doctrines of in loco parentis and administrative
authoritarianism. In Hosty v. Carter, the Seventh Circuit ruled by a 7-4
majority that administrators at public colleges have total control over
subsidized student newspapers. But the scope of the decision is breathtaking,
since the reasoning of the case applies to any student organization receiving
student fees. Student newspapers, speakers and even campus protests could now be
subject to the whim of administrative approval.
John K. Wilson, "The Case of the Censored Newspaper," Inside Higher Ed,
June 24, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/24/wilson
Jensen Comment: I have to disagree to John Wilson on this one.
Students sometimes become overzealous and cause embarrassments that spill over
to the entire college community such as the doctoring of a photograph of in the
student newspaper at Middlebury College that made one of the Middlebury's
invited speakers look like Adolph Hitler. There are also issues of
slander, obscenity, and political/religious insensitivity that can run totally
out of control. Owners of newspapers like the New York Times and
Washington Post have censorship controls. Why shouldn't colleges be
afforded the same controls? The Los Angeles Times recently experimented
with an uncensored Wiki blog that lasted only two days because it became
obscene. Censorship versus academic freedom is not a black and white issue
due to risks of slander and obscenity.
ATM Fees Keep Moving Higher
Not only are banks charging their own customers more if
they use another bank's ATMs, but they're also charging higher fees for other
banks' customers who use their machines. This spring, the average fee a bank
charges a customer for using another bank's ATM hit a record $1.35, up from
$1.29 last fall, according to Bankrate.com's Checking Account Pricing Study.
Meanwhile, the average costs that ATM owners are charging noncustomers who use
their machines -- also known as "surcharges" or "foreign ATM fees" -- rose to
$1.40 from $1.37.
Jane J. Kim, "ATM Fees Keep Moving Higher: Banks Increase Charges To
Capture Revenue Lost As Credit-Card Use Rises," The Wall Street Journal,
June 23, 2005; Page D2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111948478481267067,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
New survey reveals salaries for Management Accountants rising
Top management accountants and finance professionals
pulled ahead of public accountants in both average salary and total compensation
in 2004 as the new auditing requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act took effect.
Public accounting, which held the top spot in 2003, fell to 6th place last year
with management accountants and finance professionals rising to first and second
place, according to the findings of the 16th annual salary survey conducted by
the Institute of Management Accountants (IMA). Salaries and compensation were
found to be higher for professionals holding a Certified Management Accountant
(CMA) credential only ($97,908), than for those with a Certified Public
Accountant credential ($93,104) alone. Professionals holding both certifications
had the highest earnings of all ($105,155), and those with neither certification
had the lowest ($79,763).
Andrew Priest, "New Survey reveals salaries for Management Accountants Rising,"
AccountingEducation.com, June 18, 2005 ---
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news6298.html
Note the the link to the IMA site is incorrect in the above article. The
correct link is
http://www.imanet.org/ima/index.asp
Bob Jensen's threads on careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
Best product designs according to Business Week ---
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/toc/05_27/B39410527design.htm
Many of the winning
entries from this year's competition for Industrial Design
Excellence Awards spring from a close observation of the
customer
Consumer Goods
These products have personality and listen to
what users want
Design Strategy
Design can provide a tactical advantage by
delivering a powerful brand message
Disruptive Design
Creative destruction can transform markets,
from footwear to musical instruments
Brand Extension
Good design can also be an image enhancer and
bring new life to existing brands
Asian Design
Coming up with signature looks has worked
wonders for countries throughout the region
European Design
The Continent is pulling ahead by virtue of
elegance and elan (?)
Catalyst Award Winners
Fine design, dandy sales: These products get
the prize for also adding to the bottom line
|
|
Trivia (well maybe not so trivial) from The Washington
Post on June 21, 2005
IBM just opened its fifth software
development center in India and announced plans to hire 1,000 programmers for
the new center by the end of 2005. How many people does the company currently
employ in India at its four other centers?
A.
230,000
B.
23,000
C.
2,300
D.
230
Apple Computer Inc.'s CEO Steve
Jobs says which college class helped him set Macintosh apart from competitors?
A.
Anthropology
B.
Calligraphy
C.
Greek
D.
History
MIT's DSpace Explained
In 1978, Loren Kohnfelder invented digital certificates
while working on his MIT undergraduate thesis. Today, digital certificates are
widely used to distribute the public keys that are the basis of the Internet's
encryption system. This is important stuff! But when I tried to find an online
copy of Kohnfelder's 1978 manuscript, I came up blank. According to the MIT
Libraries' catalog, there were just two copies in the system: a microfiche
somewhere in Barker Engineering Library, and a "noncirculating" copy in the
Institute Archives . . . DSpace is a long-term, searchable digital archive. It
creates unchanging URLs for stored materials and automatically backs up one
institution's archives to another's. Today, DSpace is being used by 79
institutions, with more on the way. But as my little story about Kohnfelder's
thesis demonstrates, archiving data is only half the problem. In order to be
useful, archives must also enable researchers to find what they are looking for.
Sending e-mail to the author worked for me, but it's not a good solution for the
masses. Long-term funding is another problem that DSpace needs to solve. "The
libraries are seeking ways of stabilizing support for DSpace to make it easier
to sustain as it gets bigger over time," says MacKenzie Smith, the Libraries'
associate director for technology. Today, development on the DSpace system is
funded by short-term grants. That's great for doing research, but it's not a
good model for a facility that's destined to be the long-term memory of the
Institute's research output. Says Smith: "We need to know how to support an
operation like this in very lean times."
Simson Garfinkel, "MIT's DSpace Explained," MIT's Technology Review, July
2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/07/issue/feature_mit.asp?trk=nl
Bob Jensen's threads on "OKI, DSpace, and SAKAI" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Investing and borrowing news and
commentaries
Blogosphere from Yahoo Finance ---
http://biz.yahoo.com/special/blog05.html
For professors who abuse classrooms for personal viewpoints
David Horowitz isn’t mentioned by name in a two-page
statement being released today by 26 higher education organizations. But the
statement, on “academic rights and responsibilities,” is a response to
Horowitz’s “Academic Bill of Rights,” which many professors view as an assault
on their rights. Organizers of the statement being issued today say that it was
an effort to state publicly that academe is not monolithic ideologically and
that colleges can — without the government — deal with professors (a distinct
few, according to most academic leaders) who punish students for their views.
Organizers hoped the statement would deflate the movement in state legislatures
and Congress to enact the Academic Bill of Rights. Horowitz called the statement
“a major victory” for his campaign and said that it opened up the possibility
that he would work directly with colleges on remaining differences of opinion,
rather than seeking legislation.
Scott Jaschik, "Detente With David Horowitz," Inside Higher Ed, June 23,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/23/statement
"Locating Bourdieu," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, June 23, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/23/mclemee
He was especially sharp (some thought
brutal) in analyzing the French academic world. At the same
time, he did very well in that system; very well indeed. He
was critical of the way some scholars used expertise in one
field to leverage themselves into positions of influence
having no connection with their training or particular field
of confidence. It could make him sound like a scold. At the
same time, it often felt like Bourdieu might be criticizing
his own temptation to become an oracle.
In the course of my own untutored
reading of Bourdieu over the years, there came a moment when
the complexity of his arguments and the aggressiveness of
his insights suddenly felt like manifestations of a
personality that was angry on the surface, and terribly
disappointed somewhere underneath. His tone registered an
acute (even an excruciating) ambivalence toward intellectual
life in general and the educational system in particular.
Stray references in his work
revealed glimpses of Bourdieu as a “scholarship boy” from a
family that was both rural and lower-middle class. You
learned that he had trained to be a philosopher in the best
school in the country. Yet there was also the element of
refusal in even his most theoretical work — an almost
indignant rejection of the role of Master Thinker (played to
perfection in his youth by Jean-Paul Sartre) in the name of
empirical sociological research.
There is now a fairly enormous
secondary literature on Bourdieu in English. Of the
half-dozen or so books on him that I’ve read in the past few
years, one has made an especially strong impression, Deborah
Reed-Danahay’s recent study
Locating Bourdieu (Indiana
University Press, 2005). Without reducing his work to
memoir, she nonetheless fleshes out the autobiographical
overtones of Bourdieu’s major concepts and research
projects. (My only complaint about the book is that it
wasn’t published 10 years ago: Although it is a monograph on
his work rather than an introductory survey, it would also
be a very good place for the new reader of Bourdieu to
start.)
Continued in article
From the Carnegie Foundation News and Announcements in June
2005
Documentary Examines the Quality of Higher Education in
America
Declining by Degrees: Higher Education at Risk, a new
documentary produced by Carnegie visiting scholar John Merrow
premiers June 23 on PBS (check local listings). The documentary
follows 30 students and teachers, as it explores the road
between admissions and graduation—a route that is no longer
linear. Going beyond what Americans believe about the college
experience, Declining by Degrees exposes the
disappointment, disorientation and deflation that so many
college students feel, and the struggles they face, regardless
of the schools they choose to attend.Visit the
Declining by
Degrees Web site »
Seek Simplicity .
. . and Distrust It
In a recent Education Week commentary,
Carnegie President Lee S. Shulman argues for "a
more evidence-based strategy for crafting our
education policies" while acknowledging that
this course "does not bypass the need for
interpretation and judgment."Read the
commentary, "Seek
Simplicity . . . and Distrust It." |
|
|
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The Risk Return Tradeoff in the Long-Run: 1836-2003
The risk–return tradeoff is fundamental to finance.
However, while many asset pricing models imply a positive relationship between
the risk premium on the market portfolio and the variance of its return,
previous studies find the empirical relationship is weak at best. In sharp
contrast, this study, demonstrates that the weak empirical relationship is an
artifact of the small sample nature of the available data, as an extremely large
number of time-series observations is required to precisely estimate this
relationship. To maximize the available time-series, I employ the nearly two
century history of US equity market returns from Schwert (1990), exploring the
empirical risk-return tradeoff for a variety of specifications that allow for
asymmetric volatility, regime-switching, and additional factors associated with
intertemporal (ICAPM) hedging demands. Similar to studies that use the more
recent US equity price history, conditional market volatility in the historical
data is persistent and displays strong asymmetric relationships to return
innovations. Further, the conditional correlation between stock and bond markets
is closely related to periods of documented financial crises. Finally, in
contrast to evidence based upon the recent US experience, the estimated
relationship between risk and return is positive and statistically significant
across every specification considered.
Christian T. Lundblad, "The Risk Return Tradeoff in the Long-Run: 1836-2003,"
SSRN Working Papers, October 2004 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=671324
Daniel Patrick Moynihan once called this "thievery"
Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan and South Carolina
Senator Jim DeMint are calling for legislation to bring an immediate halt to the
ongoing political raid on the surplus payroll taxes collected by Social
Security. Congress now spends that cash on current programs--from cotton
subsidies, to defense, to the Dr. Seuss Museum. Every day that Congress fails to
act, another $200 million is spent rather than being saved for future
retirement. Daniel Patrick Moynihan once called this "thievery," and if
corporate America were engaged in this type of accounting fraud Eliot Spitzer
would be hauling CEOs to jail.
"A Surplus Idea Congress should give workers back their extra Social Security
taxes," The Wall Street Journal, June 23, 2005 ---
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110006860
Iron Mike has metal fatigue
Mike Tyson's role model Sonny Liston once said that
someday, "they will write a blues song just for fighters. It'll be with slow
guitar, soft trumpet, and a bell." Strum that guitar and ring that bell for Mr.
Tyson: His 20-year boxing career ended June 11, when he refused to come out for
the seventh round in his bout against journeyman Kevin McBride.
Gordon Marino, "Requiem for a Heavyweight," The Wall Street Journal, June
23, 2005; Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111948308793267019,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Also see
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/content/articles/050627ta_talk_remnick
What is elastin?
In the quest to replace failed or injured body parts,
fabricating them out of one of the most durable materials in the body -- elastin
-- makes a lot of sense. Today, Dr. Ken Gregory, director of the Oregon Medical
Laser Center at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center in Portland, OR, is using
the material to engineer all kinds of quasi-natural structures: blood vessels,
patches for internal injuries, replacement ear drums, bladders, and more.
David Wolman, "Natural Healing," MIT's Technology Review, June 21, 2005
---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/wo/wo_062105wolman.asp?trk=nl
Taxes for online purchases will soon be "unavoidable"
Online shoppers could be forgiven
for overlooking a California court ruling last month that
might end the tax-free joyride they've been enjoying on the
information superhighway.The appeals court ruling said
megabookstore Borders Inc. had to pay $167,000 in
taxes that it owed based on Internet sales from 1998 and
1999. The reasons are complicated and experts disagree on
the results. Looking at the big picture, however, it appears
that somehow, sometime in the future, most people who buy
things online will pay taxes.
Robert MacMillan, "An Unavoidable Tax,"
The Washington
Post, June 20, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/UnavoidableTax
"In Defense of Steroids: Jose Canseco’s
surprisingly sensible case for juice," by Aaron Steinberg, Reason Magazine, June
2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/0506/cr.as.in.shtml
How Baseball Got Big, by Jose Canseco, New York:
Regan Books, 304 pages, $25.95
On March 17,
former baseball star Jose Canseco told the House
Committee on Government Reform exactly what it wanted to
hear. The pressure to win, he said, drives pros to
steroids and subsequently pushes steroids on kids. “The
time has come,” he said, “to send a message to America,
especially the youth, that these actions, while
attractive at first, may tarnish and harm you later.”
That isn’t exactly the message he sent with his recent
pro-steroid tell-all, Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant
’Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big. And
while his new tune may sound more responsible to
legislators’ ears, it’s actually too bad that the former
A’s slugger turned his back on his own book. Beyond the
typical sports memoir material— Lamborghinis, encounters
with Madonna, growing up Latino in baseball—Canseco’s
book makes a rare and sustained argument in favor of
steroids (and substances often used in conjunction with
steroids, such as human growth hormone). Coming at a
time of full-blown moral panic, with grandstanding
senators trampling athletes’ privacy rights and the
media blaming steroids for everything from brain cancer
to suicide, Canseco’s position was a welcome one. It’s a
shame he didn’t have the guts to stick with it.
|
Firms Ranked on Ethical Behavior
Engine manufacturer Cummins Inc. topped Business Ethics
Magazine's annual survey of the "100 Best Corporate Citizens," a ranking of
leading ethical performers on the Russell 1000 Index of publicly listed U.S.
companies. The survey, published in the magazine's Spring 2005 edition, has
gained national recognition as an indicator of best practices in the area of
corporate social responsibility. Cited as a world leader in emissions
reductions, Columbus, Ind.-based Cummins has made the list for the past six
years. Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. of Waterbury, Vt., received the
second-highest rating, hailed as "a pioneer in helping struggling coffee growers
by paying them fair trade prices." Property casualty insurers St. Paul Travelers
Companies was ranked third in recognition of its community service.
"Firms Ranked on Ethical Behavior," SmartPros, June 17, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x48608.xml
June 23, 2005 message from
eNewsletter@as411.com
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* AXS-One Launches Electronic Records Compliance Information Center (ERCIC)
* SYSPRO Named “ISV of the Year” at VAR Business 500 Awards
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NetSuite In The Winner Column
Click Here to learn more:
http://www.as411.com/AcctSoftware.nsf/nlv/06222005?Edit&s=2
You must read the fine print!
Royally Screwed: I recall that the same thing happened when people signed
up for health club memberships and owed monthly payments on health clubs that no
longer existed
With the lure of 30 to 60 percent savings, Vogan signed
up with New Jersey-based NorVergence Inc. and even insured the small red box as
required. He paid $435 a month to rent the box and an additional $13 for
services, including unlimited long distance.Last summer NorVergence filed for
bankruptcy, and customers like Vogan, who owns a home remodeling firm in Silver
Spring, found that their troubles went far beyond the loss of phone service.
They discovered they were obligated to keep paying rent on the boxes to third
parties, which had bought the rental contracts from NorVergence.
Dina ElBoghdady, "Promised Savings, They Rented the Boxes And Now They're Really
Paying for It: NorVergence Went Bankrupt; Customers Still Owe," The
Washington Post, June 20, 2005; Page D01 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/19/AR2005061900662.html?referrer=email
Radio Memories ---
http://radiomemories.libsyn.com/
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
CIA: The World Factbook 2005
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for economic statistics are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#EconStatistics
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for encyclopedias etc. are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Dictionaries
On June 26, 2005, Time Magazine announced an extensive
cover feature on Abraham Lincoln ---
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1077267,00.html
The U.S. Social Security System may be insolvent in less than
ten years
The recent annual report issued by the Social Security
Board of Trustees demonstrates with undeniable clarity that Social Security
faces a looming financial crisis. Worse still, the report shows Social
Security's lurch toward insolvency has accelerated. In just a little more than a
decade, Social Security will begin to run a deficit, the study shows. Deficits
will continue and amplify every year well beyond the turn of the next century.
Despite early protestations from many on Capitol Hill that "there is no crisis,"
few serious observers of the current state of Social Security hold out hope the
system can survive as presently constructed.
Thomas R. Saving, "Social Security Insolvency Accelerating: Study
Says Crisis is much closer than previously believed," Heartland Institute, July
1, 2005 ---
http://www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=17329
International Freedom Center ---
http://www.ifcwtc.org/index.html
Video Guide To Securing Your Computer
I
wanted to call attention to a new resource
on washingtonpost.com for people who need a
little help getting started in securing
their computers. We produced a
series of "screencasts" or video guides
demonstrating some of
the basic steps users need to take to stay
safe online, including brief primers on
choosing and using firewall and anti-virus
software, downloading and installing the
latest Microsoft Windows patches, and taking
advantage of free anti-spyware tools.
These videos are by
no means definitive guides, but I hope they
will be of some use to those who find
themselves completely intimidated by
computer security.
Brian Krebs, "ideo Guide To Securing
Your Computer," The Washington Post
---
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2005/05/video_guide_to_.html?referrer=email
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and networking security are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
RealNetworks Patch Fixes
Four Critical Bugs
Real Networks,
the company that
makes the RealOne and
RealPlayer multimedia
players (and runs the Rhapsody
music service), has issued a set of patches
to fix at least
four serious security problems
in its various
products. Updates are available for
versions of the company's software running
on Windows, Mac and Linux. To find out which
versions need patching, check out the above
link. Instructions for finding out which
version you are running and how to download
the patches are available at that link as
well.
Brian Krebs, "RealNetworks Patch Fixes Four
Critical Bugs," The Washington Post
---
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2005/06/realplayer_patc.html?referrer=email
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and networking security are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Don't fall for this Citibank phishing trip
June 24,
2005 message from Andrew Priest
[a.priest@ECU.EDU.AU]
It is a phishing scam email. Get them most days.
Sometimes I am amazed at the number of banks I have accounts with :-) The
link in this one takes you to
http://snipurl.com/CitiScam which is a poor
attempt at looking like the CTI website.
The actual CTI website is at
https://web.da-us.citibank.com/cgi-bin/citifi/scripts/login2/login.jsp .
Note the warning in the yellow box.
Regards Andrew
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and networking security are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Do Capital One and J.C. Penney companies have any ethics?
Unwanted software slithered into Patti McMann's
home computer over the Internet and unleashed an annoying barrage of pop-up ads
that sometimes flashed on her screen faster than she could close them. Annoying,
for sure. But the last straw came a year ago when the pop-ups began plugging
such household names as J.C. Penney Co. and Capital One Financial Corp.,
companies McMann expected to know better. Didn't they realize that trying to
reach people through spyware and its ad-delivering subset, called adware, would
only alienate them?
Michael Gormley, "Major Advertisers Caught in Spyware Net," Associated Press,
June 24, 2005 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050624/ap_on_hi_te/spyware_s_advertisers
Jensen Comment: My wife got suspicious of several magazine subscription
renewal charges from J.C. Penney, because she's never subscribed to any
magazines via J.C. Penney. When the magazines arrived she had been
throwing them out for over a year along with other junk mail. J.C. Penney
willingly credited her for the previous year's undetected subscription charge.
But what was telling to me is that it appears J.C. Penney actually has a
department set up to refund these charges if customers get suspicious.
Those that do not notice these unwanted billings probably go on paying year
after year even though they never ordered these magazine subscriptions.
Where are the corporate ethics?
You can read more about the serious J.C. Penney insurance
scandals at
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/jcpenney.html
Advice for workers who get a poor performance evaluation
report from their supervisors ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/26/business/yourmoney/26advi.html
First Aid Myths: Ignore These Summer 'Cures' ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/107/108508.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_01
Microsoft's RSS Move
You know a technology has moneymaking potential when
Microsoft finally jumps in. Known for beating rivals with their own inventions,
Gates & Co. have decided its time to make a move on RSS, the hot technology
among geeks for distributing text, audio and video over the Internet. I say
geeks, because readers, the desktop software that aggregates content published
via RSS, or really simple syndication, hasn't made it to the mainstream. Because
the average consumer doesn't know or care about RSS, it's the perfect time for
Microsoft to muscle in and pretend to offer something "new and exciting" to the
millions of consumers using Windows at home.
Editor's Note, Internet Week Newsletter, June 27, 2005
Bob Jensen's threads on RSS Rich Site Summary are under "RSS" at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#ResourceDescriptionFramework
The U.S. Supreme Court made a bad mistake on this one
"The question answered yesterday was: Can
government profit by seizing the property of people of modest means and giving
it to wealthy people who can pay more taxes than can be extracted from the
original owners? The court answered yes... During oral arguments in February,
Justice Antonin Scalia distilled the essence of New London's brazen claim: 'You
can take from A and give to B if B pays more taxes?... That is the logic of the
opinion written by Justice John Paul Stevens and joined by justices Anthony
Kennedy, David Souter, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer" -- Washington
Post columnist George Will, writing on yesterday's Supreme Court ruling
upholding a city's right to seize private property for the benefit of a private
developer.
Opinion Journal, June 24, 2005
Also see
http://www.reason.com/interviews/bullock.shtml
Exams can be great motivators
Criticism of objective tests of knowledge includes the
oft-repeated claim that teachers "teach to" tests rather than teaching other,
presumably more mind-enriching, stuff. But the criticism only works if you
assume the self-discipline and information children learn while preparing for an
exam is worthless - and why should that be? In fact, exams can be great
motivators, encouraging students to absorb information and figure out how to
apply it at maximum efficiency. About the only information I retain from physics
and chemistry are the formulas I memorised for exams; I can still recite poetry
learned for exams.
Miranda Devine, "Scam shows worth of exams," Sydney Morning Herald, June
26, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/06/25/1119321939099.html
Yahoo Shuts Many Chat Rooms As Minors Are Solicited for Sex
Yahoo Inc. shut down all its user-created chat rooms,
after a Houston television station reported that some were being used to solicit
minors for sex, and several companies withdrew advertising from Yahoo's site.
Jim Carlton and Chelsea Deweese, "Yahoo Shuts Many Chat Rooms As Minors Are
Solicited for Sex," The Wall Street Journal, June 24, 2005; Page B3
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111956614574768116,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Does French 'Non' Hurt American Interests?
You report that the
French "non" vote is a blow to U.S. interests since the proposed European Union
constitution "was expected to strengthen a key U.S. foreign-policy ally and
sometime partner in efforts to combat global terrorism and nuclear proliferation
in countries such as Iran" ("A
French 'No' Reminds Europe of Many Woes,"
page one, May 31). Which ally was that? The proposed E.U. constitution aimed to
centralize European foreign policy, giving more power to such heroes of the
battle against terrorism as French President Jacques Chirac and German
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and helping stifle the voices of Britain, Poland,
Italy, the Czech Republic and our other actual allies. Given Mr. Chirac's
comment to the new members of the E.U. when they disagreed with France over the
liberation of Iraq that they weren't "well brought up" and should "shut up," it
seems hard to see the French "non" as a blow to American interests.
Andrew P. Morriss. Professor of Business Law & Regulation Case School of
Law Cleveland "Does French 'Non' Hurt American Interests?" The Wall Street
Journal, Non June 24, 2005; Page A13 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111957543084468404,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
German proverb: "Whose bread I eat his song I sing."
"Auditors: Too Few to Fail," by Joseph Nocera, The New York Times,
June 25, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/25/business/25nocera.html
Yet the word now seems to be that the Justice
Department will probably not indict the firm (KPMG).
This is partly because KPMG has belatedly apologized, admitted the tax
shelters were "unlawful," and cut adrift its former rising stars (and tried
to shift the blame for the shelters to them). And it is working to come up
with a deal with prosecutors that, however painful, will fall short of the
death penalty.
But it's also because the government is afraid of
further shrinking the number of major accounting firms. Remember when people
used to say that the major money center banks were "too big to fail"-
meaning that if they ever got in real trouble the government would have to
somehow ensure their survival? It appears that with only four big accounting
firms left, down from eight 16 years ago, there are now "too few to fail."
How pathetic is that?
. . .
"What infuriates me about the accounting firms is
the enormous power they have," said Howard Shilit, president of the Center
for Financial Research and Analysis. "You just can't compel them to do
things they ought to do. And the fewer firms there are, the more
concentrated their power." To my mind, the biggest problem is the hardest to
change - that accounting firms are paid by the same managements they are
auditing. Nobody really thinks about changing this practice mainly because
it's been that way forever. But, "it's the elephant in the room," said Alice
Schroeder, a former staff member at the Financial Accounting Standards Board
who later became a Wall Street analyst. In the memorable phrase of Warren E.
Buffett's great friend and the vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, Charles
T. Munger - quoting a German proverb: "Whose bread I eat his song I sing."
June 26, 2005 reply from Denny Beresford
[dberesford@TERRY.UGA.EDU]
Bob,
The author of this article has set up a "Forum" in
which readers are encouraged to report their reactions to the issue of so
few major accounting firms. It's at
www.nytimes.com/business/columns . There are some
very interesting comments already recorded - some of the suggestions might
actually make sense.
Denny
The forum link is at
http://forums.nytimes.com/top/opinion/readersopinions/forums/businesstechnology/accounting/index.html
June 27, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Some of the forum's replies are from nut cases.
But there are some good suggestions, particularly the suggestion about
pooling of audit fees. This would not eliminate the risk of a bad
audit, but it does take the fee negotiation risk out of the picture.
The mako59 reply from a PwC CPA is well written.
Bob Jensen's threads on the two faces of KPMG are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#KPMG
Bob Jensen's threads on the future of auditing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#FutureOfAuditing
From Columbia University Teachers College
The Institute conducts research and evaluations,
provides information services, and assists schools, community-based
organizations, and parent school leaders in program development and evaluation,
professional development, and parent education.
The Institute for Urban and Minority Education ---
http://iume.tc.columbia.edu/
From the Scout Report on June 23, 2005
The Physics Department at Mississippi State
University provides links to physics-related Java and Macromedia Shockwave
Player simulations that have been created around the world. The modules are
sorted into nine categories: measurements, math, mechanics, waves, electricity
and magnetism, thermodynamics, light and optics, modern physics, and astronomy.
The simulations are then further divided into subtopics so that users can easily
locate helpful items. This website offers a great way for students to quickly
obtain materials to assist in their physics studies.
Mississippi State University: Physics Simulations [Java, Macromedia Shockwave
Player]
http://webphysics.ph.msstate.edu/javamirror/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for science are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#050421Science%20and%20Medicine
The Power of Culture
Culture is an essential part of development
cooperation, and should be equated with food certainty, for example, health and
education. This assertion is the guideline for the event Beyond Diversity:
Moving towards MDG no. 9 being organised by Hivos in Amsterdam on 2 June 2005.
The event is being organised in recognition of the tenth birthday of the Hivos
Culture Fund.
The Power of Culture, June 2005 ---
http://www.powerofculture.nl/uk/index.html
The Dawn of a Legend
25 April 1915 is a date etched in Australia’s
history. Its anniversary is commemorated across the country each year as
ANZAC Day.
To many this is Australia’s most
important national day.In the morning of this day Australian troops
made a landing on a hostile shore along the
Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey. Some saw it as Australia’s “baptism of
fire” and “the birth of nationhood”.
The Dawn of a Legend ---
http://www.awm.gov.au/dawn/index.asp
Association of Hispanic Arts
http://www.latinoarts.org/
Love them versus "land" them
"And will you be able to pay the property taxes in sickness and in health?"
As house prices increase, so does the speed of
modern courtship. One in 10 adults would now consider buying with their
girlfriend or boyfriend within the first six months of dating, a survey by
Lloyds TSB discovered. More than three-quarters of the 1,885 adults questioned
said they would commit to a joint purchase within the first year of their
relationship. The age group most likely to put property over love was 25- to
34-year-olds. Six out of 10 said they would consider buying a property with
their partner to get into the housing market. And women were more likely to do
this than men.
Nina Goswami, "Good looks are important - but a new home comes first when
picking a boyfriend," Sunday Telegraph, June 26, 2005 ---
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/26/nhouse26.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/06/26/ixnewstop.html
Viva le rent free
The concept of "egalité" may be enshrined in the French
constitution but, when it comes to free housing, some are proving more equal
than others. Staff at the chateau, who range from directors to gardeners and
maintenance workers, are housed in 200 coveted "grace-and-favour" apartments,
which are considered the ultimate "job perk". Almost 200,000 politicians, civil
servants and public sector workers benefit from free or low-rent accommodation
in France. The perk is estimated to cost French taxpayers more than a billion
euros a year and millions more in undeclared taxes, and it has become the focus
of increasing public outrage about the squandering of state money. State
prosecutors who have investigated the perk, which dates back to the 1940s,
estimate that although its property portfolio could earn the state about €1.4
billion a year, rental income only totals €30 million (Ł19 million).
Kim Willsher, "French bureaucrats refuse to give up lavish free homes as economy
wilts," Sunday Telegraph, June 26, 2005 ---
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/06/26/wfran26.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/06/26/ixworld.html
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) isn't what it used to be
The answer has to do with the occasionally strange way
the government produces the numbers that define our economic life - numbers on
which vast sums are wagered every day. Until 1983, the bureau measured housing
inflation by looking at what it cost to buy and own homes, considering factors
like house prices, mortgage interest costs and property taxes. But given the
shifts in interest rates and housing prices, those measures could show big
bounces from month to month. Besides, homes are a strange hybrid of a consumable
good and a long-term investment. As part of a long-running evaluation, the
bureau wanted to "separate out the investment component from the consumption
component" of the housing market, said Patrick C. Jackman, an economist at the
bureau.
Daniel Gross, "How Home Prices Can Be Hot but Inflation Cool," The New York
Times, June 26, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/26/business/yourmoney/26view.html
Gangs: A Threat to National Security
The seed network already exists to facilitate this
organization. Gangs increasingly have international roots. Called "supergangs"
by law enforcement officials, these gangs often rely on the network of
associates outside the United States (often from their home country) for drugs
and money laundering. The El Salvadorian gang Mara Salvatrucha — or MS-13 — has
over 80,000 members in Central America and a rapidly rising presence in the
United States. This makes our porous Southern border an easy target not only for
drug smuggling, but human smuggling. Last year, the border patrol caught 1.2
million people trying to enter the United States. Many think they missed as much
as four times that many, and international gangs have found human trafficking to
be a potent source for income. Fees for illegal entry can reach as high as
$40,000, depending on the nationality of the person being brought into the
country.
Newt Gingrich, "Gangs: A Threat to National Security," Fox News, June 26,
2005 ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,160595,00.html
Snopes reports the following on the fabric fresher called
Bounce ---
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/household/bounce.asp
Origins:
Classifying as "True" or "False" items which enumerate the many wonderful
uses to which a particular household product can be put is always
problematic, for a couple of reasons: Many household products will do at
least a passable job in a variety of uses other than the ones for which they
are primarily intended, so such claims are hardly remarkable or unique.
Products designed for particular uses are generally
more effective at those tasks than other products put to non-intended uses.
(That is, bug spray might clean glass just fine, but plain old window
cleaner is better, cheaper, and safer for that purpose.) Many of the uses
for Bounce brand fabric softener sheets listed above can be found on the
Bounce web site and have to do with odor elimination. This is hardly
surprising since Bounce is a scented fabric softener sheet, and just about
any scented product can be used (with varying degrees of effectiveness) to
mask ordinary household smells.
Nonetheless, one of our more intrepid readers
tested most of the uses for Bounce listed above and reported the following
mixed results:
Get rid of ants: It will chase ants away when
you lay a sheet near them.
Totally did not work. My kitchen is right
next to the back stoop, and we get a lot of ants around summer time. I must
have stuffed every nook and cranny of my kitchen with Bounce sheets, but the
suckers just crawled all over them and into the kitchen anyway. Orange
Clean, I found, worked like a charm to not only safely disinfect my kitchen,
but create a veritable ant Jonestown.
Musty book smells: It takes the odor out of
books and photo albums that don't get opened too often.
Well, kinda. I have an old Bible that we don't open because it's so fragile.
I stuck a couple of sheets in there and a few weeks later they smelled like
. . . flowery Bible pages. I guess if a big household problem for you is a
book smelling too "booky," then Bounce may be your solution. For me, it
still smelled like a book, and I still didn't care that much.
Repels mosquitoes: Tie a sheet of Bounce through
a belt loop when outdoors during mosquito season.
Another totally didn't work. I went to Florida on vacation, and spent a lot
of time horseback riding. I dislike mosquito bites, and that whole West Nile
thing was going on, so I had a Bounce sheet tied around every belt loop. It
looked kind of funky and cool, but didn't repel a mosquito worth a darn. My
knees were COVERED in bumps. I'm thinking maybe the stupid sheets ATTRACTED
the little bugs. Stupid Bounce.
Eliminates static electricity from your
television screen.
Since Bounce is designed to help eliminate static cling, wipe your
television screen with a used sheet of Bounce to keep dust from resettling.
Worked! I was so shocked. Then I remembered — a paper towel will do the same
thing. On a test between two TVs in my home, the Bounce actually did about
the same as plain old Windex on a paper towel.
Dissolve soap scum from shower doors. Clean with
a sheet of Bounce.
I don't have shower doors, but I did try it on my shower curtain. The
scrubby feeling on the Bounce sheet actually helped in the scrubbing of some
soap residue, but I wouldn't trade in my S.O.S. pad for it.
Freshen the air in your home. Place an
individual sheet of Bounce in a drawer or hang in the closet.
I have a chest of drawers that constantly makes my clothes smell like
lumber. I tried this and it worked like a charm. My clothes not only stopped
smelling like the Keith Brown, but if I put a sheet between individual pairs
of nylons, they wouldn't stick together or get all tangled up. This is
pretty cool.
Prevent thread from tangling. Run a threaded
needle through a sheet of Bounce before beginning to sew.
I couldn't tell you, I can't sew anything without a machine, and I could
tangle anything. This is tough to test — how do you tell human error from
just natural thread tangling?
Prevent musty suitcases. Place an individual
sheet of Bounce inside empty luggage before storing.
Same thing with the musty books. I never noticed my suitcases smelling
like anything. They did smell a little flowery, but nothing to write home
about.
Freshen the air in your car. Place a sheet of
Bounce under the front seat.
That poor Bounce sheet got so smashed, stomped, spilled on and generally
abused sitting on the floor beneath the seat that no fresh scent happened. I
did stick one in the glove compartment, but it just kept getting in the way
of my glove compartment stuff, and for what? A flowery smell? Buy a little
pine tree and get over it.
Clean baked-on foods from a cooking pan. Put a
sheet in a pan, fill with water, let sit overnight, and sponge clean. The
anti static agent apparently weakens the bond between the food and the pan
while the fabric softening agents soften the baked-on food.
Totally did not work at all. Not only did I not feel completely
comfortable washing things I eat off of with laundry stuff, but I did a
side-by-side test. Two casseroles. One bounce sheet, one plain water. Water
did the same as a Bounce sheet; that is, helped unstick the glued-on food,
and so I'd say that the H2O weakened the bond between the food and the pan,
not the Bounce.
Eliminate odors in wastebaskets. Place a sheet
of Bounce at the bottom of the wastebasket.
Right. This made me feel like I was just throwing stuff away. I used it
in the bathroom, and it kind of worked, but no better or worse than the
aerosol can I keep in there and occasionally spritz in the trash.
Collect cat hair. Rubbing the area with a sheet
of Bounce will magnetically attract all the loose hairs.
No, it won't. I tried on my couch, and it just pushed them around. A
lint roller works wonders, though.
Eliminate static electricity from venetian
blinds. Wipe the blinds with a sheet of Bounce to prevent dust from
resettling.
See the bit about the TV.
Wipe up sawdust from drilling or sand papering.
A used sheet of Bounce will collect sawdust like a tack cloth.
Did not test.
Eliminate odors in dirty laundry. Place an
individual sheet of Bounce at the bottom of a laundry bag or hamper.
This didn't work well for me. Five people keep all our dirty laundry
centrally located in a big box in the laundry room. A few Bounce sheets
mixed in did little to detox that area. However, I will say, for a small
hamper it may just work.
Deodorize shoes or sneakers. Place a sheet of
Bounce in your shoes or sneakers overnight so they will smell better in the
AM.
I am a Birkenstocks girl, and if you are in your bare feet in the same
shoes everyday, they get to SMELL. I stuck a couple of Bounce sheets in my
sandals, wrapped them in a plastic bag and waited overnight. Worked like a
charm. Now, after a particularly hard day, I do the Bounce wrap treatment.
Loved it
Forwarded by Betty Carper
Charles Schultz Philosophy
The following is the philosophy of the late Charles Schultz, the creator of
the "Peanuts" comic strip. You don't have to actually answer the questions. Just
read the e-mail straight through, and you'll get the point.
1. Name the five wealthiest people in the world.
2. Name the last five Heisman trophy winners.
3. Name the last five winners of the Miss America.
4. Name ten people who have won the Nobel or Pulitzer Prize.
5. Name the last half dozen Academy Award winner for best actor and actress.
6. Name the last decade's worth of World Series winners.
How did you do?
The point is, none of us remember the headliners of yesterday. These are no
second-rate achievers. They are the best in their fields. But the applause dies.
Awards tarnish. Acheivements are forgotten. Accolades and certificates are
buried with their owners.
Here's another quiz. See how you do on this one:
1. List a few teachers who aided your journey through school.
2. Name three friends who have helped you through a difficult time.
3. Name five people who have taught you something worthwhile.
4. Think of a few people who have made you feel appreciated and special.
5. Think of five people you enjoy spending time with.
Easier?
The lesson: The people who make a difference in your life are not the ones
with the most credentials, the most money, or the most awards. They are the ones
that care.
"Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in
Australia." (Charles Schultz)
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Jacob, age 92, and Rebecca, age 89, living in Florida, are all excited about
their decision to get married. They go for a stroll to discuss the wedding, and
on the way they pass a drugstore. Jacob suggests they go in.
Jacob addresses the man behind the counter: "Are you the owner?"
The pharmacist answers, "Yes."
Jacob: "We're about to get married. Do you sell heart medication?"
Pharmacist: "Of course we do."
Jacob: "How about medicine for circulation?"
Pharmacist: "All kinds."
Jacob: "Medicine for rheumatism and scoliosis?"
Pharmacist: "Definitely."
Jacob: "How about Viagra?"
Pharmacist: "Of course."
Jacob: "Medicine for memory problems, arthritis, jaundice?"
Pharmacist: "Yes, a large variety. The works."
Jacob: "What about vitamins, sleeping pills, Geritol, antidotes for
Parkinson's disease?"
Pharmacist: "Absolutely."
Jacob: "You sell wheelchairs and walkers?"
Pharmacist: "All speeds and sizes."
Jacob: "Could we use this store as our Bridal Registry."
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A man owned a small farm in Iowa. The Iowa Wage & Hour Department claimed he
was not paying proper wages to his help and sent an agent out to interview him.
"I need a list of your employees and how much you pay them," demanded the
agent.
"Well, there's my hired hand who's been with me for 3 years. I pay him $600 a
week plus free room and board. The cook has been here for 18 months, and I pay
her $500 a month plus room and board. Then there's the half-wit that works here
about 18 hours a day. He makes $10 a week and I buy him a bottle of bourbon
every week," replied the farmer.
"That's the guy I want to talk to; the half-wit," says the agent.
"That would be me," the farmer answered
Debbie Bowling added the following Tidbits (Thank you Debbie)
JUNE 20 TIDBITS
Scientists find early signs of Alzheimer's
Subtle change in a memory-making brain region seems to predict who will get
Alzheimer's disease nine years before symptoms appear, scientists reported
Sunday.
The finding is part of a wave of research aimed at
early detection of the deadly dementia -- and one day perhaps even preventing
it.
Researchers scanned the brains of middle-aged and
older people while they were still healthy. They discovered that lower energy
usage in a part of the brain called the hippocampus correctly signaled who would
get Alzheimer's or a related memory impairment 85 percent of the time.
"We found the earliest predictor," said the lead
researcher, Lisa Mosconi of New York University School of Medicine. "The
hippocampus seems to be the very first region to be affected."
But it is too soon to offer Alzheimer's-predicting
PET scans. The discovery must be confirmed. Also, there are serious ethical
questions about how soon people should know that Alzheimer's is approaching when
nothing yet can be done to forestall the disease....continued in article.
Copyright 2005 The
Associated Press, "Scientists find early signs of
Alzheimer's," CNN.com, June 20, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/alzh0620
Crackdown Puts Corporations,
Executives in New Legal Peril
More Than Ever,
Businesses Face Risk of Prosecution; Post-Enron, a Changed View...Companies
Rush to Cooperate
Businesspeople and corporations are at
greater risk of criminal liability than ever before.
A wave of corporate fraud starting
with the 2001 collapse of Enron Corp. has led to potent new weapons for
prosecutors such as stiffer financial penalties and prison terms. The Securities
and Exchange Commission has more money and manpower to pursue civil-fraud cases.
Once rare, the threat of criminal
indictment of corporations themselves has become more common as the Justice
Department employs what are known as deferred-prosecution agreements. A list of
blue-chip American companies have submitted to these pacts, including
American International Group
Inc.,
Monsanto Co. and
Time Warner Inc. Under
the arrangements, the government charges the company with criminal behavior but
puts the prosecution on hold in exchange for a promise of reform. At an
agreed-upon date, the potential charges expire. Since 2003, there have been at
least eight such pacts.
Business wrongdoing, and the
government's response, comes in waves. But this crackdown has gone further than
any in the past. It has fundamentally changed the terms of engagement between
the authorities and their corporate quarry....continued in article.
DEBORAH SOLOMON and
ANNE MARIE SQUEO, "Crackdown
Puts Corporations, Executives in New Legal Peril," The Wall Street
Journal,
June 20, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/corp0620
Google Plans Online-Payment
Service
Google Inc. this year plans to offer an
electronic-payment service that could help the Internet-search company diversify
its revenue and may put it in competition with eBay Inc.'s PayPal unit,
according to people familiar with the matter. Exact details of the search company's
planned service aren't known. But the people familiar with the matter say it
could have similarities with PayPal, which allows consumers to pay for purchases
by funding electronic-payment accounts from their credit cards or checking
accounts. Some consumers like PayPal for the
security it offers, since it allows them to share their banking or credit-card
numbers only with PayPal without having to divulge the information to merchants.
Officials of Google and PayPal declined to comment....continued in article.
KEVIN J. DELANEY and MYLENE MANGALINDAN,
"Google Plans Online-Payment Service," The Wall
Street Journal,
June 20, 2005; Page B4,
http://snipurl.com/goog0620
Billy Jack Is Ready to Fight the Good Fight Again
It has been more than 30 years, but Billy Jack is still
plenty ticked off.
Back then, it was bigotry against Native Americans,
trouble with the nuclear power industry and big bad government that made this
screen hero explode in karate-fueled rage. At the time, the unlikely combination
of rugged-loner heroics - all in defense of society's downtrodden and forgotten
- and rough-edged filmmaking sparked a pop culture and box-office phenomenon.
Now the man who created and personified Billy Jack,
Tom Laughlin - the writer, director, producer and actor - is determined to take
on the establishment again, and his concerns are not so terribly different. Mr.
Laughlin (and therefore Billy Jack) is angry about the war in Iraq and about the
influence of big business in politics. And he still has a thing for the nuclear
power industry....So Mr. Laughlin and Ms. Taylor are planning to bring their
characters back to the big screen with a new $12 million sequel, raising money
from individuals just as they did to make their films three decades ago.
In this new film, they say, they will take on social
scourges like drugs, and power players like the religious right. They say they
will also outline a way to end the current war and launch a political campaign
for a third-party presidential candidate....continued in article.
SHARON WAXMAN,
"Billy Jack Is Ready to Fight the Good Fight Again," The New York Times, June 20, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/bj0620
Firms' Auditor Choices Dwindle
The reduction in
the number of top-tier accounting firms, to the Big Four from five earlier this
decade, is making it difficult for many large companies to change auditors, and
the problem would expand if the Justice Department indicts KPMG LLP for selling
allegedly abusive tax shelters, interviews with company executives and surveys
show.
Intel Corp. is one of the many big
companies now bumping up against the limitations. After using Ernst & Young LLP
as its auditor for more than three decades, the semiconductor maker considered
switching recently for a fresh look at its financials. But it stuck with Ernst
after receiving proposals from the other Big Four firms: Deloitte & Touche LLP,
KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. That is because federal regulations bar the
three other firms from serving as Intel's independent auditor unless they give
up valuation, computer-software and other work they do for Intel.
"Because there are only a limited
number of large multinational audit firms that do the kind of work that we need,
if we were to switch audit firms, all sorts of dominos would fall," said Cary
Klafter, corporate secretary at Intel....continued in article.
DIYA GULLAPALLI, "Firms'
Auditor Choices Dwindle," The Wall Street Journal,
June 21, 2005; Page C1,
http://snipurl.com/audit0621
Credit-Card Breach Tests Banking
Industry's Defenses
A
month after it was discovered that a hacker broke into the computer network of a
company that processes card transactions for merchants, the breach now is
testing the banking industry's defenses against card fraud -- and the public's
patience for the secretive way it deals with the issue.
The nation's banking industry already
is paying the price for more than 40 million credit and debit cards that may be
exposed to fraudsters. That is because the burden of detecting fraudulent
transactions -- and the costs associated with them -- lies largely with the
financial institutions that issue those cards.
So far, no banks have indicated that
they plan to broadly cancel accounts, reissue cards to customers or alert all
cardholders whose accounts may be vulnerable -- in part because of the high cost
of doing so. Instead, the financial institutions are bolstering internal
fraud-monitoring programs and placing red flags on accounts that have been
identified as being most exposed.
Several large card-issuing banks said
they haven't yet seen any indications of widespread fraudulent activity tied to
the latest in a string of computer security breaches.
"We informed the banks of all the
accounts that are at risk, and which ones were accessed," MasterCard spokeswoman
Sharon Gamsin said. "The next step is the banks'. It's now in their hands."
MasterCard said Friday that an
unidentified person had broken into the computer network of CardSystems
Solutions Inc., an Atlanta-based company that processes credit-card transactions
for small- and midsize businesses. The intruder last month gained access to
names, account numbers and card codes that are commonly used to commit card
fraud.
MasterCard International Inc. said
that more than 40 million cards branded by MasterCard, Visa USA Inc., American
Express Co. and Discover, a unit of Morgan Stanley, had been compromised. Of
those, MasterCard said 13.9 million of its cards had been exposed, with about
68,000 of those considered at a higher level of risk. Visa said 22 million cards
had been compromised in the incident, which is being investigated by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation.
Yesterday, the nation's banks were
scrambling to identify the accounts that may be at the highest level of risk
from the attack. Washington Mutual Inc. in Seattle, one of the nation's biggest
debit-card issuers, said it had closed some 1,400 accounts, reissued cards and
notified those customers by telephone after being advised by Visa that those
accounts were a "high risk" of fraud. Some of the accounts had already been
closed, after being flagged by customers for suspected fraudulent use, a bank
spokeswoman said.
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., the nation's
largest card-issuer, said it was continuing to collect information about the
accounts that may have been compromised in the hacking incident. "We're going
through this as quickly as we can to see what, if anything, has happened with
these accounts," a J.P. Morgan spokesman said.
Consumers aren't liable for
unauthorized purchases and traditional merchants also aren't responsible for
fraud if they adhere to card-authorization policies. That isn't the case for
online merchants, however, who typically bear the brunt for fraudulent card
purchases.
The banks' strategy for dealing with
potential fraud has already unleashed an outcry from consumer advocates and
legislators who say they aren't doing enough to prevent fraud and disclose
information about such incidents to their customers. Indeed, rising consumer
concern about data-theft fraud threatens to clash with the policies of many
banks to keep quiet about what they do to monitor compromised accounts.
For example, Citigroup Inc., one of
the nation's largest card issuers, has said only that it takes "appropriate
actions" to detect and prevent fraud when informed of such breaches, and that it
notifies some customers it thinks may be at risk. Spokeswoman Janis Tarter
declined to discuss, for "security reasons," how Citigroup gauges whether
customers are at risk, or how many customers whose accounts had been compromised
in the latest breach had been informed.
Even getting a handle on how much
fraud results from such data theft is hard to do. Credit-card associations
report that overall fraud has been declining steadily for years, as better
systems are constructed for blocking fraudulent charges. Last year, credit-card
issuers lost $788.3 million to fraud, down from $882.5 million in 2003,
according to the Nilson Report, which tracks the credit-card industry. But Visa
and MasterCard don't break out the level of fraud due to data theft. And
card-issuing banks typically don't disclose losses due to credit-card fraud.
In the end, banks often conclude that
it is more expensive to replace compromised cards than to step up account
monitoring and absorb fraud losses when they occur. Visa estimates that when
breaches do happen, only 2% of the exposed cards end up with any fraudulent
charges on them.
And with the cost of issuing new cards
estimated at between $10 and $20 apiece, including customer service, it could be
cheaper for banks to leave such cards activated, says Julie Fergeson vice
president of eFunds Corp., which offers fraud-protection technology for
merchants. Other industry estimates put the cost of notifying customers by mail
of a potential security threat at as much as $2 a letter.
Washington lawyer Thomas Vartanian,
who advises financial institutions about credit-card fraud and identity theft,
contends that the string of recent disclosures of security breaches is partly a
function of the rise of online retailing, which has increased the flow of online
data for hackers to steal.
In addition, he said, financial
institutions and regulators are becoming more sensitive to disclosure
responsibilities. A California law that went into effect in 2003 mandates the
disclosure of security breaches if information such as Social Security numbers
or bank-account information is "acquired" by an unauthorized person, so long as
the disclosure doesn't compromise an investigation. In March, federal regulators
issued "guidance" to banks to notify customers about security breaches "that
could result in substantial harm or inconvenience to the customer."
ROBIN SIDEL and MITCHELL PACELLE, "Credit-Card
Breach Tests Banking Industry's Defenses," The Wall Street Journal,
June 21, 2005; Page C1,
http://snipurl.com/ccbrch0621
Retirement Plans Get New
Safeguards
In response to a wave of lawsuits, a
growing number of companies are hiring outside consultants to oversee the
handling of company stock held in employee retirement plans.
These independent fiduciaries are
taking the place of company executives who have traditionally monitored the
company-stock component of those plans on behalf of the employees. In the
post-Enron Corp. era, companies are concerned about employees who may be loading
up on company stock in their retirement plans -- and who don't have the time or
skills necessary to keep tabs on the stock on their own.
A range of companies such as many of
the airlines and insurance firm Aon Corp. have moved to outside experts. Running
the retirement plans is a growing business for trust companies and others,
including U.S. Trust Corp., State Street Corp. and Fiduciary Counselors Inc.
U.S. Trust, for instance, today handles fiduciary duties for a dozen 401(k)
plans with combined assets of nearly $4 billion. Five years ago, the firm, a
unit of Charles Schwab Corp., had no 401(k) plans in its fiduciary-services
business.
...continued in article.
JEFF D. OPDYKE, "Retirement
Plans Get New Safeguards," The Wall Street Journal,
June 21, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/retire0621
Dial-Up Internet Going the Way of Rotary Phones
For years, Michelle Phillips, a real estate agent
in Indianapolis, drove to her office at odd hours just to check her e-mail
messages and search Web sites on her company's high-speed Internet lines because
her dial-up connection at home was too slow.
"At home, I can do laundry, take a shower and wash
dishes while the computer is logging onto the Internet," she said with a laugh.
Now she can pocket the gas money. This month, she
signed up for a promotional offer from
SBC Communications:
introductory broadband service for $14.95 a month, or nearly $10 less than what
she paid for a dial-up account with AOL. To qualify, she had to sign a one-year
contract and have an SBC phone line.
Ms. Phillips is among the seven million Americans
expected to drop their slow Internet connections this year for high-speed lines,
which are as much as 100 times as fast and are always on. As recently as six
months ago, a majority of Americans were using dial-up connections at home. In
the first quarter of this year, broadband connections for the first time
overtook dial-up.
SBC's deep discount - $5 below its lowest previous
offer, and among the cheapest on the market - is just the latest strategy in the
broadband wars....continued in article.
KEN BELSON,
"Dial-Up Internet Going the Way of Rotary
Phones," The New York Times, June 21, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/dlup0621
TIDBITS JUNE 23
NYSE to Pursue Growth Options
Beyond Stocks
The Big Board plans to consider expanding
into international markets, options and other derivatives to compete in an
increasingly competitive and consolidating industry, Chief Executive Officer
John Thain said.
The New York Stock Exchange chief's
comments, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, reflect a new global
reality for the markets where securities are traded. Technological advances that
have made electronic trading more reliable and efficient are fueling a shakeout,
as increasingly sophisticated customers demand quicker and less expensive trades
on a wide variety of securities going far beyond stocks and as regulators
scrutinize what brokerage houses charge investors.
That means the real estate that
exchanges traditionally have provided traders who oversee the buying and selling
of securities has become less important than spending on reliable, fast
technology that can match buyers and sellers without human intervention....continued
in article.
AARON LUCCHETTI and DAVID REILLY, "NYSE to
Pursue Growth Options Beyond Stocks,"
The Wall Street Journal,
June 23, 2005; Page C1,
http://snipurl.com/nyse0623
Donating Stock to a Charity
ASK PERSONAL JOURNAL
Q:
I want to donate shares of stock that I've accumulated over 30 years. How do I
give only the shares I bought 30 years ago, which have a much lower cost basis
than those acquired more recently?
Thomas Borst, Levittown, N.Y.
A: When you give stock that has
been held long term, you can get a tax deduction for the fair market value of
the stock -- plus avoid paying the capital gains if you had sold the stock. If
you have the certificates for the shares, all you have to do is transfer them to
the charity. If your stock records are kept electronically at a brokerage house,
check whether the firm has segregated the shares by cost basis and specify which
shares to donate. If the firm has "mushed all the shares together," it will be
tough to segregate the low-basis shares so your cost basis might instead be an
average over the 30 years, says New York lawyer Brit L. Geiger.
Rachel Emma Silverman, "Donating Stock to a
Charity," The Wall Street Journal,
June 23, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/dntstk0623
A Dizzying Array of Options for Using the Web on Cellphones
As the market for cellular phone service matures, the
wireless industry is counting on creating and filling a new need: data services
that allow phones to receive e-mail, navigate the Web and download games, music
and video.
But many wireless data plans are a smorgasbord of
options that can leave customers bewildered.
"That is one of my biggest gripes with the wireless
carriers," said Peter Rojas, editor in chief of Engadget, a Web log devoted to
consumer electronics. "They are doing a really terrible job of communicating
wireless data to their subscribers."
While several wireless companies have simplified
their offerings, choosing the right plan means weighing several considerations:
the amount of data you plan to download, the speed of the network, the type of
phone you use, and the Web sites you plan to visit....continued in article.
SANDEEP JUNNARKAR, "A Dizzying Array of Options for Using the Web
on Cellphones," The New York Times," June 23, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/wbcel0623
Appliances Wipe Out Blackouts
If someday your TV stays on during a heat wave,
you may have your dryer and dishwasher to thank. The
Department of Energy is developing technologies to avert electrical grid
failures such as the blackout of August 2003, including household appliances
that temporarily reduce their power consumption. The devices switch off when
they detect a power disruption on the electricity grid. Energy officials say the
devices could save consumers billions of dollars by reducing the need to build
new power stations....continued in article.
John Gartner, "Appliances Wipe Out Blackouts,"
Wired News,
02:00 AM Jun. 22, 2005 PT,
http://snipurl.com/appl0623
Music: Paint the Sky With Stars ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/paint.htm
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Your time is limited, so don't waste it
living someone else's life.
Steve Jobs, addressing the Class of 2005 at the 114th
Commencement on June 12, 2005 at Stanford University
Listen to the full address via
streaming audio
Banish Bad Breath ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/pages/22/107277?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_01
Jensen Comment: Now if Beano really worked as claimed
the world would have more fresh air.
Faculty Salaries: What happened to the economic
theory of prices and supply and demand?
Why do aerospace engineering
professors make a little more money than classics professors at
some public universities, and a whole lot more at others?The
answer, according to a study by the
Cornell Higher Education Research Institute,
to be published in the Economics of Education
Review, is that faculty members in
departments that are perceived as being higher quality get paid
more.
David Epstein, "What They Earn Across the Quad," Inside
Higher Ed, June 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/27/salaries
The largest private university in the world is growing at an accelerating
pace
The Apollo Group, owner of the University of
Phoenix, announced Tuesday that its profit in the third quarter of its current
fiscal year rose by 40 percent over the comparable period a year ago.
Enrollments at Phoenix and Apollo’s other institutions rose by 23 percent, to
295,500 students, and online enrollments climbed by 41 percent from the third
quarter last year.
Doug Lederman, "Quick Takes," Inside Higher Ed, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/29/qt
UConn Finds Rootkit in Hacked Server
The University of Connecticut has detected a rootkit on
one of its servers, almost two years after the stealth program was placed there
by malicious hackers. The rootkit was found on a server that contains names,
social security numbers, dates of birth, phone numbers and addresses for most of
the university's 72,000 students, staff and faculty, university officials
confirmed Monday.
Ryan Naraine, "UConn Finds Rootkit in Hacked Server," eWeek, June 27,
2005 ---
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1831947,00.asp
Another bad decision handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court
In a major setback for proponents of the legal
rights of journalists, the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday declined to hear the
case of two reporters who have refused to cooperate with a grand-jury
investigation into an alleged government leak that exposed the identity of a
Central Intelligence Agency operative.
Joe Hagan, "Two Reporters Now Face Prison For Contempt," The Wall Street
Journal, June 28, 2005; Page B1---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111988135319170428,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Jensen Comment: In a free world, the first lines of defense against fraud
and corruption are freedom media and whistle blower protections. The U.S.
Supreme Court dealt a hard blow to these lines of defense.
June 28, 2005 reply from Jagdish Gangolly
[JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
Rootkits are the sysadmins' worst nightmare. They
have been popular in the unix world for a long time, but now getting quite
popular in the windows world. Since it was undetected for nearly two years,
I am assuming that the infected systems were windows ones (unix sysadmins
have been a lot more careful for a long time).
Rootkits are not really very difficult to
manufacture. A good source of information is the following source:
Hidden Backdoors, Trojan Horses and Rootkit Tools
in a Windows Environment
http://www.windowsecurity.com/articles/Hidden_Backdoors_Trojan_Horses_and_Rootkit_Tools_in_a_Windows_Environment.html
Jagdish
It's like banning vehicles to rid ourselves of drunk drivers: Yet
another bad U.S. Supreme Court decision
In a case with huge implications for the media and
technology industries, but narrower ones for higher education, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled unanimously on Monday that entertainment companies can sue
commercial providers of file sharing programs for copyright infringement. The
court’s decision in MGM Studios v. Grokster, which provided endless fodder for
law professors and other experts on intellectual property law on Monday, is
directly relevant for colleges and universities mainly because students have
been major consumers of the movies and music that the entertainment studios have
accused the file sharing companies, like Grokster, of permitting to be
downloaded illegally.
Doug Lederman, "Supreme Court Rules Against File Sharing Companies," Inside
Higher Ed," June 20, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/28/supreme
Also see
http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,68018,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1
Bob Jensen's threads on online education and training programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
Just another of those many banking system rip offs
Forty-two members of the Republican rank and file in
the House sent a powerful message to their leaders last week when they joined
with Democrats and voted to close an outrageous loophole that allows lenders to
skim billions of dollars from loans that should be going to needy college
students. At issue is a special category of student loans for which the
government guarantees lenders a gargantuan return of 9.5 percent, even though
the prevailing rate charged to students is lower than 3.5 percent. The loans,
backed by tax-exempt bonds, were created in the 1980's, when interest rates were
high, to keep lenders in the college loan business. Congress tried to phase out
the high-interest loans in 1993, when rates declined and federal subsidies were
no longer needed. But the lenders have contrived a series of bookkeeping tricks
that have kept the system going, despite damning reports by the Government
Accountability Office, the Congressional Budget Office and outside advocacy
groups. More recently, the House Republican leadership has seemed determined to
keep the gravy train running for the banking industry.
"Ending the College Loan Giveaway," The New York Times, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/29/opinion/29wed2.html
What's the Indian solution? India's economic growth outpaces even
China
In the long run, India will overtake China in economic
growth owing to home-grown entrepreneurship, stronger infrastructure to support
private enterprise and companies which compete internationally with global
firms, a media report has claimed. The report, written by Yasheng Huang,
associate professor at the Sloan School of Management at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, and Tarun Khanna, a professor at Harvard Business
School, say that India was superior in utilising its resources, thus
contributing to economic performance.
"India's economy set to surpass China," rediff.com, June 29, 2005 ---
http://inhome.rediff.com/money/2005/jun/29india1.htm
What's the Irish solution? Ireland's economic growth outpaces the
rest of Europe
Here's something you probably didn't know: Ireland
today is the richest country in the European Union after Luxembourg. Yes, the
country that for hundreds of years was best known for emigration, tragic poets,
famines, civil wars and leprechauns today has a per capita G.D.P. higher than
that of Germany, France and Britain. How Ireland went from the sick man of
Europe to the rich man in less than a generation is an amazing story. It tells
you a lot about Europe today: all the innovation is happening on the periphery
by those countries embracing globalization in their own ways - Ireland, Britain,
Scandinavia and Eastern Europe - while those following the French-German social
model are suffering high unemployment and low growth. Ireland's turnaround
began in the late 1960's when the government made secondary education free,
enabling a lot more working-class kids to get a high school or technical degree.
As a result, when Ireland joined the E.U. in 1973, it was able to draw on a much
more educated work force. By the mid-1980's, though, Ireland had reaped the
initial benefits of E.U. membership - subsidies to build better infrastructure
and a big market to sell into. But it still did not have enough competitive
products to sell, because of years of protectionism and fiscal mismanagement.
The country was going broke, and most college grads were emigrating. "We went on
a borrowing, spending and taxing spree, and that nearly drove us under," said
Deputy Prime Minister Mary Harney. "It was because we nearly went under that we
got the courage to change."
Thomas L. Friedman, "The End of the Rainbow E-Mail This
Printer-Friendly," The New York Times, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/29/opinion/29friedman.html?
What's the Russian wrong-way solution?
Russia is gradually sinking into the abyss of
facism. Its seeds have been sown by those in power and are now shooting forth in
society. The Kremlin, using the patriotic feelings of its own subjects, has
created a political force with a name vivid and dear to every Russian's heart -
Rodina, or Motherland. This organization, with the support of President Vladimir
Putin's administration, has not only gained access to all mass media
(television, radio, and newspapers), but surpassed the 5 per cent barrier and
made it into the State Duma.
Ruslan Linkov, "Fascist Tendencies at High Levels of Power," St. Petersburg
Times, June 28, 2005 ---
http://www.sptimes.ru/archive/times/1082/opinion/o_16150.htm
"Meme, Mine," by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, June 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/28/mclemee
Ex post facto, it does seem obvious.
After all “intellectual” doesn’t count for much,
product-placement-wise. In the American vernacular, it is a
word usually accompanied by such modifiers as “pseudo” and
“so-called” (just as the sea in Homer is always described as
“wine-dark").
No doubt the Google algorithm, if tweaked a bit more, will
one day lead you right to the personals ads for the New
York Review of Books. For now, at least, the offers for
a carnal carnival cruise are gone.
Meanwhile, Inside Higher Ed has
now launched a
page with a running list of
Intellectual Affairs columns from February to the present.
It has more than three dozen items, so far — an assortment
of essays, interviews, causeries, feuilletons, and
uncategorizable thumbsuckers ... all in one central
location, suitable for bookmarking.
It’s also worth mentioning that
Inside Higher Ed itself now offers RSS and XML feeds.
(The editors are too busy or diffident to announce this, but
some public notice of it is overdue.) To sign up, go to the
home
page and look for the buttons at
the bottom.
This might also be a good time to
invite readers to submit tips for Intellectual Affairs —
your thoughts on subjects to cover, books to examine,
arguments to follow, people to interview. This column will
strive, in coming months, to be equal parts Dennis Diderot
and Walter Winchell. Your brilliant insights, unconfirmed
hunches, and unsubstantiated hearsay are more than welcome.
(Of course, that means I’ll have to go confirm and
substantiate them, but such is the nature of the gig.)
Direct your mail
here.
Bloggers will love TagCloud
Now, many bloggers are turning to a new service called
TagCloud
that lets them cherry-pick articles in RSS feeds by key
words -- or tags -- that appear in those feeds. The blogger
selects the RSS feeds he or she wants to use, and also
selects tags. When a reader clicks on a tag, a list of links
to articles from the feeds containing the chosen keyword
appears. The larger the tag appears onscreen, the more
articles are listed.
Daniel Terdiman, "RSS Service Eases Bloggers' Pain,"
Wired News, June 27, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,67989,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_8
Bob Jensen's threads on RSS are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#ResourceDescriptionFramework
Bob Jensen's threads on Weblogs and blogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
Zap that TV Commercal: Networks Rush to Keep Advertisers
The traditional TV commercial, which generates billions
of dollars in ad revenue for TV networks every year, is under assault.
Technology has made it easier for viewers to zap through ads, prompting some big
advertisers to scale back the money they put into TV commercials. Anxious to
stop advertisers from defecting to other media, TV networks are scrambling for
new ways to lure marketing dollars. Working in the networks' favor is that
advertisers haven't given up on television. Some, increasingly prodded by
networks, are turning to product placement -- paying for their products to be
prominently featured in TV shows. But creative considerations can limit these
opportunities.
Brian Steinberg, "Networks Rush to Keep Advertisers," The Wall Street Journal,
June 27, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111982541172769835,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
First Amendment Furor
Some books are destined to set off
controversy. The University of California Press has such a
volume in
Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of
History, slated for release in
August. The book argues that supporters of Israel prevent human
rights abuses by that country from getting the attention they
deserve, in part by calling those who raise such issues
anti-Semites. That thesis would be controversial from most
authors, but the book in question is by
Norman G. Finkelstein, a political
scientist at DePaul University who has enraged Jewish groups by
questioning the role of the Holocaust and with consistently
harsh criticism of Israel.Even
before the release of Beyond Chutzpah, the book has set off a
broader debate over the First Amendment. An
article
published Friday by The Nation charges that Alan M. Dershowitz,
a Harvard law professor who is attacked in the book and who has
been a critic of Finkelstein, tried to get the California press
to call off publication.
Scott Jaschik, "First Amendment Furor,"
Inside
Higher Ed, June 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/27/dershowitz
Seismic communication among animals
Scientists have long known that seismic communication
is common in small animals, including spiders, scorpions, insects and a few
vertebrate species, such as white-lipped frogs, kangaroo rats and golden moles.
Seismic sensitivity also has been observed in elephant seals—huge marine mammals
not related to elephants. But O'Connell-Rodwell was the first to suggest that a
large land animal is capable of sending and receiving vibrational messages. "A
lot of research has been done showing that small animals use seismic signals to
find mates, locate prey and establish territories," she notes. "But there have
only been a few studies focusing on the ability of large mammals to communicate
through the ground." Her insights generated international media attention after
the Dec. 26, 2004, tsunami disaster in Asia, following reports that trained
elephants in Thailand had become agitated and fled to higher ground before the
devastating wave struck, thus saving their own lives and those of the tourists
riding on their backs. Because earthquakes and tsunamis generate low-frequency
waves, O'Connell-Rodwell and other elephant experts have begun to explore the
possibility that the Thai elephants were responding to these powerful events.
"Elephants may be able to sense the environment better than we realize," she
says, pointing to earlier studies showing that elephants will sometimes move
toward distant thunderstorms. "When it rains in Angola, elephants 100 miles away
in Etosha National Park start to move north in search of water. It could be that
they are sensing underground vibrations generated by thunder."
Mark Schwartz, "Looking for earth-shaking clues to elephant communication,"
Stanford Report, June 1, 2005 ---
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2005/june1/elephant-052505.html
What is the best way to publish your book?
The two men fought a celebrated judicial duel before
the French king — a fight to the death with lance, sword and dagger that also
decided the lady’s fate. The affair was still controversial in France at the
time I stumbled on the story, and many original documents survived, but no one
had ever written a full-length account. Fascinated by the story, I started
researching it and eventually began work on a book. I also began talking with
editors, literary agents, and even people connected to the film industry. At one
point, I registered some material with the Writers Guild of America to protect
my intellectual property. The book was represented briefly by a well-known
Hollywood talent agency — until the firm reorganized and my agent left,
orphaning the project. Other literary agents read the proposal and sample
chapters, only to turn the project down. Editors at highly respected trade
houses read my material but politely rejected it, or hesitated indefinitely. An
editor at a leading university press told me my book had “little commercial
potential,” while an editor at another top academic press read my proposal and
offered me a contract right over the phone. Disappointed with the book’s
commercial fortunes so far, I was nearly ready to accept the offer. But around
this time a very good literary agency took on the partly completed book, and
within three days of putting it on the market they sold it at auction to a
division of Random House. Foreign rights sales soon followed, and the deal
notice in Publishers Weekly brought new film interest. The book was published
last October, became a History Book Club selection, and was featured on NPR’s
“Weekend Edition.” After its January release in Britain, it was serialized on
BBC Radio 4’s “Book of the Week.” A BBC television documentary is now in the
works.
Eric Jager, "Crossing Over," Inside Higher Ed, June 29, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/29/jager
Reinsurance Accounting Has Fresh Anomaly
Unum says its outside auditor, Ernst & Young LLP,
approved its accounting for the Unum transactions. A Tennessee insurance
regulator confirms that officials there signed off on the accounting, and Linnea
Olsen, Unum's director of investor relations, says Massachusetts insurance
regulators, who oversee one of the Unum units involved, also approved the
arrangement. A representative of the Massachusetts insurance regulator declined
comment on the matter . . . The National Association of Insurance Commissioners,
which helps state regulators develop and coordinate insurance rules, says while
accounting guidelines for life insurers like UnumProvident and
property-and-casualty companies like National Indemnity might differ in some
ways, they shouldn't lead to one party treating a contract as risk-transfer
reinsurance and the other recording it as a low- or no-risk deposit transaction.
Both sets of guidelines are based on generally accepted accounting principles
and "have very similar principles for risk transfer," says Scott Holeman, a
spokesman for the NAIC. For Unum, the three contracts were executed at a crucial
time: In the second quarter of 2004, when the transactions were announced,
Unum's stock was struggling amid declining earnings and unfavorable Wall Street
coverage. In May of that year, Standard & Poor's downgraded Unum's credit
rating, citing problems with Unum's risk controls and other practices that "led
to significant reserve charges and asset impairments." Under the
contracts, Unum paid National Indemnity $707 million in cash and recorded a
"reserve credit" of $522 million as well as $141 million in tax and other
benefits, according to a document that Unum presented to analysts in spring
2004. Unum's net cost: $44 million. Unum initially would get "maximum payments"
from the reinsurer of $783 million, with the reinsurer's "maximum risk limit"
growing to "approximately $2.6 billion over time," the document states. So
why would National Indemnity book the pacts as deposits from Unum rather than as
a liability that could grow over time? As of Dec. 31, National Indemnity's
filings with state regulators showed a total of $733.2 million as a deposit.
Each party may have judged the risk of the contracts differently. Some analysts
also note that reinsurance buyers and sellers have different motivations to
start with. A buyer typically wants the benefits of reinsurance accounting,
which include reducing claims liabilities and offsetting losses with reinsurance
proceeds. Meanwhile, reinsurance accounting can have its downside for sellers,
because it requires them to book up front the estimated cost of claims under the
policy.
Karen Richardson and Gregory Zuckerman, "Reinsurance Accounting Has Fresh
Anomaly," The Wall Street Journal, June 28, 2005; Page C3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111992201318671196,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Jensen Comment: The FASB is currently looking into gaps in GAAP regarding
reinsurance accounting, especially ploys for off-balance sheet financing.
Hi Deborah,
The trick is to register your dog rather than yourself, although lie a little
about the dog’s age so it does not appear to be less than 18.
Actually I registered years ago and did not keep up with the latest requests.
Thanks for the update.
You may receive advertisements, although my dog is registered with a lot of
newspapers and does not seem to get too many advertisements in addition to all
the Nigerian-type solicitations that arrive just for being online.
Bob Jensen
From: Deborah XXXXX
Sent: Monday, June 27, 2005 11:13 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: The June 27, 2005 edition of Tidbits
Bob,
I've been a reader of your postings for many years.
You obviously spend a lot of time on these offerings, and I probably should
have written you sooner to let you know how much I enjoy reading what you
put out here.
This is the first time I have come across something
on the Tidbits list that has made me stop and worry about reading on.
Actually it isn't you or the topic you listed, but the steps necessary to
read the article you pointed out.
The clip is printed below, but basically it
requires the reader to fill out a free registration/subscription form to get
access to the news article. I don't suppose you have seen the registration
form, or have read the "terms and conditions" lately. Most of us don't take
the time to read these carefully or think about what that info is going to
be used for someday down the road. While we would think that the New York
Times would be a safe website, the information they require for registration
is extremely dangerous in the wrong hands.
In this current example, NYTIMES.COM demands that
you give them your year of birth, your occupation and your salary level.
Seems harmless enough by itself. But if you read the terms and then the
privacy statements, you will find that they share this information with
advertisers. Have you been asked by another site to provide the month you
were born? What about a site that asks for just the day of the month by
itself? If you merge databases, or use data mining you can put all this
together and generate a very complete financial profile.
BTW, they also tell the reader that the terms of
use can be changed at any time. The site doesn't have to tell you via email
or other notification that the terms have changed. All they have to do is
post the change in the terms message. Any time you use their site, you are
automatically accepting and agreeing to any changes that have been made to
the terms of use. Even if you never actually see them or had reason to
suspect they might have changed.
Okay, so maybe this is a bit of over reaction. But
what would you think if the same website also disclosed that their third
party advertisers are placing clear gifs on the pages you are looking at in
your browser? Since this term was new to me, and I was curious I located the
following about clear gifs. Web Bug FAQ
http://www.eff.org/Privacy/Marketing/web_bug.html
It sounds like (to a non-computer programmer like me)
any information that is on your computer is accessible to these clear gifs.
The idea of newspapers permitting their advertisers
to use the clear gifs on innocent (and unprepared) readers makes me a bit
queasy. Bob, your threads on Fraud and Ethics are excellent, but they just
go to prove that Business Ethics is really a fiction, and Fraud is a basic
business tool. Do you think it might be possible to generate a thread to
help educate us on how to avoid this new minefield of spies and thieves
called clear gifs?
Regards,
Deborah XXXXX
Arizona State University pushes into China
ASU has spent the last few weeks participating with
the world's most populous country in a whirlwind of events designed to share
knowledge between the United States and China. From bringing pictures of
research on Mars to sharing ideas on University planning and business education,
ASU and China seem to be forming a potent pair. But more importantly, recent
partnerships could mark the beginning of a long-term, economically sound
relationship between China and the West.
"University's reach spreading farther East: From Mars research
to university planning, ASU officials are using homegrown ideas to develop
stronger ties with China," Web@Devil, June 28, 2005 ---
http://www.asuwebdevil.com/issues/2005/06/28/specialreports/693327
Can a real Indian's lack of support for Ward Churchill affect a tenure
decision? It's a bit more complicated than that, but that's part of the
story
The case of
William C. Bradford isn’t quite what it seems, but
it has riled up plenty of people in Indiana . . . The university says he’s doing
great work — it recently awarded him a special fellowship. But he’s job hunting,
and whether that’s a good or bad thing depends on who you ask. Bradford says
that past reviews were unanimously positive, and that his troubles began because
his views didn’t match people’s expectations. Bradford is a member of the
Chiricahua Apache tribe and as such is one of about 15 law professors nationwide
who are American Indians. Much of his legal scholarship concerns Indian law and
he describes his views as “radical,” saying that he calls for land illegally
taken from Indians to be returned to them, and for Indian tribes to be treated
more like nations. But Bradford is not a fan of Ward Churchill, the
controversial University of Colorado professor and Native American activist. And
Bradford says that professors turned against him when he refused to sign a
petition supporting Churchill. “The presumption was that I’ve got to sign this
thing because I’m an Indian, but I can’t do that,” he says. “I’m the anti-Ward
Churchill. I’m a patriot. My ancestors were caged up by this country, but I love
this country. It’s the place where we have the greatest freedom on earth.”
Scott Jaschik, "‘Not the Right Kind of Indian’," Inside Higher Ed, June
28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/28/indiana
U.S. Pushes Broad Investigation Into Milberg Weiss Law Firm
Federal prosecutors are investigating one of the
nation's most aggressive class-action law firms, Milberg Weiss Bershad &
Schulman, for alleged fraud, conspiracy and kickbacks in scores of securities
lawsuits, and could seek criminal charges against the firm itself and its
principals. The three-year investigation focuses on allegations that the New
York-based firm routinely made secret, illegal payments to plaintiffs who
appeared on securities class-action lawsuits brought by the firm, according to
court documents and lawyers close to the case. A grand jury in Los Angeles
convened last October has been hearing evidence of alleged illegal payments in
dozens of suits filed against oil, biotechnology, drug and chemical companies
during the past 20 years, the lawyers close to the case said.
John R. Wilke, "U.S. Pushes Broad Investigation Into Milberg Weiss Law Firm,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 27, 2005, Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111983956022470148,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Humor
Forwarded by Debbie
You Know You're From San Antonio When...
You know exactly how to get to the "Ghost Tracks" from anywhere in town.
You think "pro-choice" means flour or corn tortillas.
You've never been to the Alamo.
You think a health drink is a Margarita without salt.
You think being able to read the Taco Cabana menu makes you bilingual.
You used to live in a neighborhood you wouldn't even drive through now.
There has been a road crew on your street since before the Alamodome was
built.
You still call Crossroads Mall... "Wonderland".
You've been to Midget Mansion.
You know all about the "Dancing Diablo" and the "Donkey Lady" bridge.
You know that Wheatley and Brackenridge is the same school.
You remember the Captain Gus show.
Your subwoofer has twice the value of your car.
You have three rodeo outfits but never have been on a horse
You're an expert with the brake pedal, but you have no idea what a
blinker is.
Your idea of culture is wearing a Hard Rock T-shirt.
You think the last supper was at Mi Tierra restaurant.
You do your grocery shopping at a flea market.
You think local politicians are crooks, but you still do not vote.
You have a "Selena Lives" bumper sticker on your car.
You care if San Antonio is in the "national spotlight".
A formal occasion is getting a glass with your longneck.
You believe Tacos, barbecue, tequila, and beer are the four basic food
groups.
You rented Pulp Fiction to escape the everyday violence of the city.
You think wearing bows in your hair will get you a husband.
Your White mother learned how to make Tamales & Menudo from your
neighbors.
You know the "real" definition of FIESTA is "stay home if at all
possible".
You have ordered Mexican food at a Chinese restaurant.
You had breakfast tacos at Taco Cabana on Christmas morning.
You remember the Joske's Christmas display.
You remember when JC Penney's had a restaurant.
You remember hamburgers from Whopper Burger.
You're elementary field trip was to the ButterCrust Bakery.
Signs forwarded by Auntie Bev
In a Veterinarian's waiting room: "Be back in 5 minutes Sit! Stay!"
At an Optometrist's Office "If you don't see what you're looking for,
you've come to the right place."
In a Podiatrist's office: "Time wounds all heels."
On a Septic Tank Truck in Oregon: Yesterday's Meals on Wheels
On a Septic Tank Truck sign: "We're #1 in the #2 business."
At a Proctologist's door "To expedite your visit please back in."
On a Plumber's truck: "We repair what your husband fixed."
On a Plumber's truck: "Don't sleep with a drip. Call your plumber.."
Pizza Shop Slogan: "7 days without pizza makes one weak."
At a Tire Shop in Milwaukee: "Invite us to your next blowout."
On a Plastic Surgeon's Office door: "Hello. Can we pick your nose?"
At a Towing Company: "We don't charge an arm and a leg. We want tows."
On an Electrician's truck: "Let us remove your shorts."
In a Nonsmoking Area: "If we see smoke, we will assume you are on fire
and take appropriate action."
On a Maternity Room door: "Push. Push. Push."
On a Taxidermist's window: "We really know our stuff"
On a Fence: "Salesmen welcome! Dog food is expensive."
At a Car Dealership: "The best way to get back on your feet - miss a car
payment."< /SPAN>
Outside a Muffler Shop: "No appointment necessary. We hear you coming."
At the Electric Company: "We would be "de-lighted" if you send in your
payment. However, if you don't, you will be."
In a Restaurant window: "Don't stand there and be hungry, Come on in and
get fed up."
In the front yard of a Funeral Home: "Drive carefully. We'll wait."
At a Propane Filling Station, "Thank heaven for little grills."
And don't forget the sign at a Chicago Radiator Shop: "Best place in town
to take a leak."
Forwarded by Betty Carper
A grandmother was pushing her little grandchild around Wal- Mart in a
buggy. Each time she put something in the basket she would say, "And here's
something for you, Diploma." or "This will make a cute little outfit for
you, Diploma." and so on.
Eventually a bewildered shopper who'd heard all this finally asked, "Why
do you keep calling your grandchild Diploma?"
The grandmother replied, "I sent my daughter to college and this is what
she came home with!"
Butt
jiggle is just another way of waving goodbye.
Maxine
Few
women admit their age; Few men act it.
Maxine
Forwarded by Dick Haar
BBQ: A Real Man's Cooking It's the only type of cooking a real man will
do. When a man volunteers to do the BBQ, the following chain of events are
put into motion:
1) The woman buys the food.
2) The woman makes the salad, vegetables, and dessert.
3) The woman prepares the meat for cooking, places it on a tray along with
the necessary cooking utensils and sauces, and takes it to the man who is
lounging beside the grill -- beer in hand. Here comes the important part .
4) THE MAN PLACES THE MEAT ON THE GRILL. More routine....
5) The woman goes inside to organize the plates and cutlery.
6) The woman comes out to tell the man that the meat is burning. He thanks
her and asks if she will bring another beer while he deals with the
situation. Important again .
7) THE MAN TAKES THE MEAT OFF THE GRILL AND HANDS IT TO THE WOMAN. More
routine.....
8) The woman prepares the plates, salad, bread, utensils, napkins, sauces,
and brings them to the table.
9) After eating, the woman clears the table and does the dishes. And most of
all .
10) Everyone PRAISES the man and THANKS him for his cooking efforts.
11) The man asks the woman how she enjoyed "her night off." And, upon seeing
her annoyed reaction, concludes that there's just no pleasing some women!
Forwarded by Paula
The Pentagon announced today the formation of a new 500-man elite
fighting unit called the :
U
. S . REDNECK SPECIAL FORCES (USRSF).
These North Carolina, Kentucky, West Virginia, Mississippi, Missouri,
Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, Texas and Tennessee boys will be dropped
into Iraq and
have been given only the following facts about Terrorists:
1. The season opened today.
2. There is no limit.
3. They taste just like chicken.
4. They don't like beer, pickups, country music or Jesus.
5. They are DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE for the death of Dale Earnhardt.
This mess in Iraq should be over IN A WEEK.
Forwarded by Paula
You may or may not be old enough to remember this from the very early 50s
from one of the Bud Abbott/Lou Costello black and white films from that era.
The tirade just went on and on until Abbott finally hit Costello up beside
the head and stopped it. I had forgotten how funny those guys really were.
Hope you get as big a kick out of it as I did!
Costello What’s life?
Abbott A magazine.
Costello How much does it cost?
Abbott Ten cents.
Costello Only got a nickel.
Abbott That’s tough.
Costello What’s tough?
Abbott Life
Costello What’s life?
Abbott A magazine.
Costello How much does it cost?
Abbott Ten cents.
Costello Only got a nickel.
Abbott That’s tough.
Costello What’s tough?
Abbott Life
Costello What’s life?
Abbott A magazine.
Costello How much does it cost?
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Jacob, age 92, and Rebecca, age 89, living in Florida, are all excited
about their decision to get married. They go for a stroll to discuss the
wedding, and on the way they pass a drugstore. Jacob suggests they go in.
Jacob addresses the man behind the counter: "Are you the owner?"
The pharmacist answers, "Yes."
Jacob: "We're about to get married. Do you sell heart medication?"
Pharmacist: "Of course we do."
Jacob: "How about medicine for circulation?"
Pharmacist: "All kinds."
Jacob: "Medicine for rheumatism and scoliosis?"
Pharmacist: "Definitely."
Jacob: "How about Viagra?"
Pharmacist: "Of course."
Jacob: "Medicine for memory problems, arthritis, jaundice?"
Pharmacist: "Yes, a large variety. The works."
Jacob: "What about vitamins, sleeping pills, Geritol, antidotes for
Parkinson's disease?"
Pharmacist: "Absolutely."
Jacob: "You sell wheelchairs and walkers?"
Pharmacist: "All speeds and sizes."
Jacob: "Could we use this store as our Bridal Registry."
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A man owned a small farm in Iowa. The Iowa Wage & Hour Department claimed
he was not paying proper wages to his help and sent an agent out to
interview him.
"I need a list of your employees and how much you pay them," demanded the
agent.
"Well, there's my hired hand who's been with me for 3 years. I pay him
$600 a week plus free room and board. The cook has been here for 18 months,
and I pay her $500 a month plus room and board. Then there's the half-wit
that works here about 18 hours a day. He makes $10 a week and I buy him a
bottle of bourbon every week," replied the farmer.
"That's the guy I want to talk to; the half-wit," says the agent.
"That would be me," the farmer answered
Forwarded by Dick Haar
A man calls home to his wife and says, "Honey I have been asked to go
fishing up in Canada with my boss &several of his friends. We'll be gone for
a week. This is a good opportunity for me to get that promotion I've been
wanting so could you please pack enough clothes for a week and set out my
rod and tackle box? We're leaving from the office &I will swing by the house
to pick mythings up."
"Oh! Please pack my new blue silk pajamas."
The wife thinks this sounds a bit fishy but being the good wife she does
exactly what her husband asked.
The following weekend he came home a little tired but otherwise looking
good. The wife welcomes him home and asks if he caught many fish?
He says, "Yes! Lots of Walleye, some Blue gill, and a few Pike. But why
didn't you pack my new blue silk pajamas like I asked you to do?
You'll love the answer....
>>
>>
>>
The wife replies, "I did, they're in your tackle box."
Forwarded by Dennis Beresford
All I Want for Father's Day Is a Defense Team
Outlook Bob Brody
19 June 2005 The Washington Post Copyright
2005, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved
"We've voted to audit you, Daddy," my daughter
announced one recent Saturday morning over breakfast.
"Really?" I answered absently.
"You've overstated your earnings three quarters
in a row," said Caroline, a fourth-grader and regular CNBC viewer.
"In looking at recent expenditures, we've
noticed some disturbing irregularities," added my son, Michael, a
seventh-grader who prefers to scour the stock market tables in the
newspaper. "To wit, those cases of Lafitte Rothschild 1952 in the garage
-- financed, apparently, by our 529 accounts."
"The upshot is, you're cutting corners, Daddy,"
Caroline said. "Shareholder confidence is dropping fast. Your corporate
reputation is running on fumes."
"Yeah," Michael said, "We're really concerned
about the outlook for Q2."
"Okay, kids," I said. "Look, I may have
committed a few indiscretions here and there. Maybe I invested a bit too
much capital in extending the backyard deck into the next county. But .
. . "
"Actually, Daddy," Caroline said
prosecutorially, "the abuses appear to be systemic."
"Are you saying what I think you're saying?" I
asked, now dimly aware that my authority as the family chairman and
chief executive officer was under attack.
"Yes. We suspect you're cooking the books,
Daddy," Caroline said. "And it's our job as senior management, before
worse comes to worst, to blow the whistle."
"Just remember, Dad," Michael added. "In life,
you have addition and subtraction. All the rest is just conversation."
"Listen, I'm no accountant," I said. "You
should go talk to Mom."
"But Mom told us to ask you," Michael said.
"No," I said, "she's the CFO. She cuts all the
checks."
"But you told us the buck stops with you,
Daddy," Caroline said.
"No, pumpkin," I said. "Daddy was just being
figurative there."
"But the aw-shucks defense has already failed
to pass muster in courtrooms nationwide," Michael pointed out. Could
this be? I wondered, breaking into a cold sweat and hyperventilating.
Could my kids muster enough votes on the family board of directors to
engineer my ouster from the organization?
I needed time to think. I retreated to my home
office, where my wife found me. She must have read the look on my face.
"Believe me, dear, nobody ever wanted it to come to this," she said with
a forgiving smile. "Now, please stop shredding those documents and come
finish your eggs before they get cold."
I should have seen this coming. Of late,
fathers have gotten embroiled in household accounting scandals involving
everything from sham subsidiaries to offshore accounts. In Fairfield,
Conn., a 12-year-old girl reported that her father, an otherwise loving
senior vice president in marketing, had siphoned her earnings from Girl
Scout cookies into buying a DVD player for his lawn mower. Indeed, a
study found that since 2002, fiscal fraud perpetrated by fathers against
families has risen an alarming 27 percent. The species of father we
might term the Imperial Dad, so long flying high, had fallen prey to
hubris.
In the aftermath of that traumatic Saturday
morning, my family placed me on probation pending further investigation.
Caroline formed an audit committee to impose internal controls. Michael
urged me to retain an attorney in case the family opted to file a
class-action suit against me. My wife warned me she'd invited Eliot
Spitzer to step in ("Just to have a look around," she said).
In the wake of this mutiny, my family
implemented certain procedures for me to follow. I'm now required to
bring home notarized receipts for everything, including coffee and
handouts to panhandlers. On advice of counsel, I decline to make any
comment in conversation at home that could be interpreted as an untrue
statement or material omission because anything I say to family can and
will be used against me.
The crackdown on the Imperial Dad is bound to
widen. It's probably only a matter of time before more children take
allegations of fatherly fraud to the Justice Department and seek
protection under the Juvenile Whistleblower Act. Autocratic fathers
taking out the garbage will be surrounded by SWAT teams, led off in
handcuffs and taken downtown for perp walks. Congressional hearings may
look into whether the American father is any longer fit to govern. A
special regulatory agency may be created to issue stricter Dad
Guidelines.
The Imperial Dad will ultimately devolve into
the Janitorial Dad. The Janitorial Dad will sign and certify any and all
financial statements, and switch to taking public transportation to
work. He will spend much more time reporting on his activities than
actually engaging in any. He will, in effect, do windows.
Meantime, here's some guidance for fathers. Act
humble around your family, even if you're faking it. Defer to your wife
and children on all major business decisions, even if inconvenient.
Above all, bide your time until the marketplace swings the pendulum back
in your direction.
Author's e-mail:
Bobbrody@hotmail.com
Bob Brody is a New York City public relations
executive and essayist. His wife and children regard him largely as a
vendor.
Forwarded by Betty Carper
Charles Schultz Philosophy
The following is the philosophy of the late Charles Schultz, the creator
of the "Peanuts" comic strip. You don't have to actually answer the
questions. Just read the e-mail straight through, and you'll get the point.
1. Name the five wealthiest people in the world.
2. Name the last five Heisman trophy winners.
3. Name the last five winners of the Miss America.
4. Name ten people who have won the Nobel or Pulitzer Prize.
5. Name the last half dozen Academy Award winner for best actor and
actress.
6. Name the last decade's worth of World Series winners.
How did you do?
The point is, none of us remember the headliners of yesterday. These are
no second-rate achievers. They are the best in their fields. But the
applause dies. Awards tarnish. Acheivements are forgotten. Accolades and
certificates are buried with their owners.
Here's another quiz. See how you do on this one:
1. List a few teachers who aided your journey through school.
2. Name three friends who have helped you through a difficult time.
3. Name five people who have taught you something worthwhile.
4. Think of a few people who have made you feel appreciated and special.
5. Think of five people you enjoy spending time with.
Easier?
The lesson: The people who make a difference in your life are not the
ones with the most credentials, the most money, or the most awards. They are
the ones that care.
"Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already
tomorrow in Australia." (Charles Schultz)
And that's the way it was on June 30,
2005 with a little help from my friends.
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You
have to scroll down to the titles) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics ---
http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research Videos from Harvard University ---
http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor
(an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart
finance professor, Jim Mahar from St. Bonaventure University) ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting
newsletters are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from
TheCycles.com ---
http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com
are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information
Finder ---
http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links ---
http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best
international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to
questions in technology ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works ---
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style
Hints ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on
www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for
a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers
and education technology experts in higher education from around the
country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email:
rjensen@trinity.edu
June 15, 2005
Bob
Jensen's New Bookmarks on June 15, 2005
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Fraud Updates
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about
the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
Real time
meter of the U.S. cost of the war in Iraq ---
http://www.costofwar.com/
For Quotations/Tidbits of the Week go to
Quotations and Tidbits
For Humor of the Week go to Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
My communications on
"Hypocrisy in Academia and the Media" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm
My “Evil
Empire” essay ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
"The State Of Internet Security," by Fahmida Y. Rashid,
Forbes, June
14, 2005 ---
http://www.forbes.com/technology/2005/06/14/verisign-internet-security-cx_fr_0614verisign.html
E-mails from Nigeria
asking for your help in transferring money. Important information about
compromised bank accounts.
While the scams
that daily flood our e-mail in-boxes show no signs of abating, there is
some good news for the users who have to sort through them all. So says
VeriSign (nasdaq:
VRSN -
news -
people ), in its
latest "State of Internet Security" address covering the first three
months of 2005.
Phishing attacks--the attempted theft of
information such as user names, passwords or credit-card numbers--are
increasingly more sophisticated, VeriSign said. But the company, which
lives by the sale of computer security software, says phishing attacks
are less profitable than they used to be, and of shorter duration, since
affected companies work with Internet service providers to shut down
sites capturing the information.
Pharming, also known as DNS spoofing because it
fools the domain-name system, is an alternative technique that tries to
direct users to a fake Web site even when the correct address is entered
into a browser. "It's as if you looked up a number in the phone book,"
says Phillip Hallam-Baker, a Web security expert at Verisign,
"but someone somehow changed the number, managed to swap the phone book
on you."
VeriSign's report lists ways to lock down DNS
infrastructure to shut down pharming. It encourages administrators to
upgrade their DNS software and to install cryptography solutions. Hallam-Baker
feels that pharming attacks that depend on cached information could be
eliminated fairly easily. Pharming attacks infrastructure, so the
company in charge of that segment could prevent further attacks by
upgrading necessary components.
Continued in article
Links to the ISIB report are given at
http://www.verisign.com/verisign-inc/news-and-events/news-archive/us-news-2005/page_030922.html
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and network security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Eight years ago the accounting faculty at Baylor University tore down
the stovepipes between traditional accounting core classes (financial
accounting, managerial accounting, taxation, accounting information systems,
and auditing) to achieve integrated coverage across a three-semester
sequence. Projects and case studies are used to link relational topics in
each of the five subject areas.
From Accounting Education News, June 9, 2005 ---
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news6250.html
Title: BAYLOR CPA EXAM SCORES BEAT OUT OTHER
TEXAS SCHOOLS
Source: PR Newswire
Country: United States
Date: 09 June 2005
Contributor: Andrew Priest Web:
http://www.newswise.com/
When it comes to the Certified Public
Accountant (CPA) exam, Baylor University's Accounting graduates
out-scored their counterparts at other Texas schools, according to data
released by the Texas State Board of Public Accountancy detailing the
results of the January-March 2005 exam. Further comment from Baylor in
our full news item.
"When you look at the programs that had more
than 20 people sit for the exam, Baylor leads the pack with a combined
average 65.3% pass rate across the test sections," said Terry Maness,
Dean of Baylor's Hankamer School of Business. The CPA exam consists of
four sections.
Eight years ago the accounting faculty at
Baylor University tore down the stovepipes between traditional
accounting core classes (financial accounting, managerial accounting,
taxation, accounting information systems, and auditing) to achieve
integrated coverage across a three-semester sequence. Projects and case
studies are used to link relational topics in each of the five subject
areas.
"These results demonstrate the quality of our
program," said Dr. Charles Davis, chair of the Accounting & Business Law
department. "Our grads have consistently earned the distinction of being
in the list of top ten scorers on the CPA exam historically. I'm very
proud of them."
Bob Jensen's threads on asynchronous learning are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/255wp.htm
Technology sites from Smart Stops on the Web, Journal of Accountancy,
June 2005 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/news_web.htm
Check Out Check 21
www.aicpa.org/financialliteracy
The AICPA Financial Literacy
Resource Center has added a section to its Web
site about the Check Clearing for the 21st
Century Act (Check 21). The Web site discusses
the act’s implications for auditors and
businesses, and provides links to the Federal
Reserve Board’s “Check Clearing for the 21st
Century Act” Web page and implementation
information, two frequently-asked-questions
sections and a consumer guide.
A Site With Byte
www.freebyte.com
CPAs and IT managers will want
to bookmark this Smart Stop loaded with links to
free accounting, antispam and backup software,
currency and document converters, mortgage
calculators, computing and financial glossaries
and Web browsers. There are online dictionaries
in English as well as French, German, Italian
and Spanish. There’s also free clipart, fonts
and photos that CPAs can use for marketing
brochures, and everyone can take a break in the
Jokes and Humor and Free Games sections.
Figure for Free
www.calculator.com
Sure, you already have mortgage,
percentage, scientific and standard
e-calculators. This site offers calculators for
car leases, fractions, graphing, and home equity
and general loans, plus converters for currency,
international time, temperature and units of
measure. There’s also a link to the
tax-preparation-service calculator site
www.internet-taxprep.com with tools CPAs can use
to calculate investments, mortgage refinancing
and Roth IRA returns for clients. Other
resources include current and archived tax news,
a 2005 tax guide and information about a free
online tax-filing program.
Tech Talk
www.itmweb.com
CITPs and other information
technology professionals can find resources here
on IT capital spending, department budgets and
salary ranges. Download the demo software, read
book reviews or subscribe to the free monthly IT
e-zine and newsletter. Technology Articles has
tips on making your e-mails sound more
professional and improving your project team
management skills, while the Job Listing Centers
invite employers to post open positions. IT
White Paper Spotlight offers documents on
subjects from artificial intelligence to
knowledge management.
Painless Projects
www.ittoolkit.com
Looking for more efficient ways
to manage IT procedures and roll out new
technology? Then register for a free membership
at this e-stop to access information on managing
IT operations and receive a monthly e-mail
reporting on the latest task management
resources. Members can download planning
checklists, mission and scope statement
templates and white papers on IT process
improvements. |
|
Bob Jensen's technology bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob4.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting software are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#AccountingSoftware
June 2, 2005 message from Carolyn Kotlas
[kotlas@email.unc.edu]
ARE INSTRUCTORS ESSENTIAL?
"In the commercial sector, learner-content
interaction is often seen as the only essential learning transaction,
with instructors viewed as a cost rather than a necessity." With
courseware software, online discussion tools, and instructional
designers performing many tasks related to instruction, what is left for
instructors to do? This question was recently discussed in a Sloan-C
forum. In "Are Instructors Essential?" (SLOAN-C VIEW, vol. 4, issue 5,
May 2005, pp. 5-6), forum participants cited many roles for instructors,
including:
-- Meaning makers: "explaining how and why
information is important, helping learners integrate disparate
content and make sense of it so that information can become
'knowledge and maybe even wisdom'"
-- Growth agents: "pushing [learners] . . .
'beyond their level of comfort and into areas of improvement'"
-- People builders: "instructors serve as a
bridge—in some situations, the only bridge—between learners and the
society in which they seek a place"
The article is online at
http://www.aln.org/publications/view/v4n5/blended4.htm
Sloan-C View: Perspectives in Quality Online
Education [ISSN: 1541-2806] is published by the Sloan Consortium
(Sloan-C). For more information, contact: Sloan Center for OnLine
Education (SCOLE), Olin College of Engineering and Babson College, Olin
Way, Needham MA 02492-1245 USA; tel: 781-292-2524; fax: 781-292-2505;
email: publisher@sloan-c.org; Web: http://www.sloan-c.org/.
Sloan-C is a consortium of institutions and
organizations committed "to help learning organizations continually
improve quality, scale, and breadth of their online programs according
to their own distinctive missions, so that education will become a part
of everyday life, accessible and affordable for anyone, anywhere, at any
time, in a wide variety of disciplines." Sloan-C is funded by the Alfred
P. Sloan Foundation.
SYNCHRONOUS COLLABORATION TOOLS
"Most of us experience more satisfying
interactions when we can see and hear each other in the same space and
at the same time. While online interactions support flexibility and
convenience, synchronicity provides for more efficient and natural
interaction." In "Designing for the Virtual Interactive Classroom"
(CAMPUS TECHNOLOGY, vol. 8, no. 9, May 2005, pp. 20, 22-3), Judith V.
Boettcher reviews several synchronous collaboration tools used for Web
or video conferencing, interactive classrooms, and screen sharing. She
presents several scenarios and which tools are most appropriate for each
situation. The article is online at
http://www.campus-technology.com/article.asp?id=11046
Campus Technology [ISSN: 1089-5914] is a
monthly publication focusing exclusively on the use of technology across
all areas of higher education. Subscriptions to the print version are
free to qualified U.S. subscribers. For more information, contact:
Campus Technology, 101communications LLC, 9121 Oakdale Ave., Suite 101,
Chatsworth, CA 91311 USA; tel: 818-734-1520; fax: 818-734-1522; Web:
http://www.campus-technology.com/
SIMULATION SOFTWARE AND PHYSICAL
COLLABORATION
Laboratory dissections provide opportunities
not only for subject-matter learning, but also opportunities for
cooperative learning. In "Virtual Dissection and Physical Collaboration"
(FIRST MONDAY, vol. 10, no. 5, May 2005), Kenneth R. Fleischmann uses
the example of dissection simulation software to illustrate how such
educational tools can limit a student's learning experience. By focusing
on human–computer interaction rather than human–human interaction, the
software leaves out the socialization component that is part of
traditional lab practice. Until these tools are redesigned to encourage
collaboration, Fleischmann gives suggestions for adapting these tools to
provide more interaction among students. The paper is available online
at
http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue10_5/fleischmann/index.html
First Monday [ISSN 1396-0466] is an online,
peer-reviewed journal whose aim is to publish original articles about
the Internet and the global information infrastructure. It is published
in cooperation with the University Library, University of Illinois at
Chicago. For more information, contact: First Monday, c/o Edward
Valauskas, Chief Editor, PO Box 87636, Chicago IL 60680-0636 USA; email:
ejv@uic.edu; Web: http://firstmonday.dk/.
For more thoughts on educational software, see
also:
"Next-Generation Educational Software: Why We
Need It & a Research Agenda for Getting It" by Andries van Dam, Sascha
Becker, and Rosemary Michelle Simpson EDUCAUSE REVIEW, vol. 40, no. 2,
March/April 2005, pp. 26-8, 30-4, 36, 38, 40 42-3
http://www.educause.edu/ir/library/pdf/ERM0521.pdf
Infobits subscriber Arun-Kumar Tripathi
(tripathi@amadeus.statistik.uni-dortmund.de )
recommends his article in a recent issue of UBIQUITY:
"Reflections on Challenges to the Goal of
Invisible Computing" Ubiquity: An ACM IT Magazine and Forum, vol. 6,
issue 17, May 17 - May 24, 2005
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i17_tripathi.html
Patricia Keefe, "The Shoot Horses Don't They?" June 10, 2005 ---
InformationWeek Daily
[InfoWeek@update.informationweek.com]
Never
underestimate the tenacity, perseverance, and will to live of
doomed IT projects and their guardians.
This week, United Airlines finally gave up
on its nightmare of a
baggage-handling system. That
application has been a perennial problem since its launch at the
opening of the new Denver airport 10 years ago. The FBI's
recently killed Virtual Case File system--another candidate in
the running for longest-lived IT disaster--also was big
in the news this week. Another example
of a bottomless money pit of an IT project would be Ford Motor's
five-year Everest Web-purchasing project, which was abandoned in
August last year after the automaker spent what was widely
estimated to be as much $400 million. Ford has bigger issues to
focus on right now, but Everest was a monumental disappointment.
I'm sure you can probably think of some other examples, and not
just in IT.
It's hard to fathom why--given what we
know about how unwieldy these multiyear, multimillion-dollar
projects are--companies still giddily launch these death stars.
Never mind that technology and standards are changing at a
faster and faster pace. Or the likelihood that what's current or
the hot trend in the first two years of a multiyear project may
be obsolete or passe by the end of its development cycle. What
about the 10-year projects? Many corporate strategic plans are
done in five-year cycles. What if that strategy is seriously
revised in the sixth year of the project cycle? What if the
backers of the project or key team members move on midstream?
None of this bodes well--for the company or for the IT
department.
What these kinds of projects in
general, and the United, Ford, and FBI projects in particular,
all have in common is less obvious than it might appear. You can
be sure these projects were painstakingly researched and
planned, kicked off with big budget commitments, high hopes, and
the best of intentions.
But my guess is that amid all the
intense planning designed to ensure success, somebody forgot to
plan for failure. You know what happens. People,
technology, and situations all change. Any one of which
separately or together can spell doom for your project, which
can be survivable if you know what to watch for, and you know
what to do when it happens. Knowing when, and how to gracefully
disengage from a project, is just as critical as knowing how to
successfully complete one. But nobody ever talks about that.
The United and FBI stories brought to
mind my fascinating conversation last fall with Gopal Kapur,
president of the
Center for Project Management, a
consulting firm in San Ramon, Calif.
Continued in article |
"New Rule: Accounting Changes to Be Charged to Past Periods,"
SmartPros, June 3, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x48482.xml
Say goodbye to many of those charges for
the "cumulative effect" of accounting changes that investors are
used to seeing at the bottom of earnings statements.
And say hello to "retrospective
application."
The Financial Accounting Standards
Board said Wednesday that beginning next year, companies
that make a voluntary change in their accounting must apply
the change retrospectively - revising past earnings to
reflect the effect in each period, rather than taking a
single charge against current earnings. In other words,
instead of a $1 billion charge today, a company might reduce
2004 earnings by $600 million and 2003 earnings by $400
million.
"It's quite a significant change,"
said Robert Willens, an accounting expert at Lehman
Brothers.
In part, the aim is to provide
investors with more precise and consistent year-to-year
earnings information. Pat McConnell, a Bear Stearns & Co.
accounting expert, said applying an accounting change's
effect to prior years will make it easier for investors to
analyze year-to-year trends in earnings.
The move is also part of a broader
effort by FASB to bring U.S. accounting standards closer to
those used abroad, and improve the comparability of
financial reporting between companies in different
countries.
FASB's international counterpart,
the International Accounting Standards Board, already has a
rule requiring certain accounting changes to be reported
retrospectively.
Some observers are concerned that
investors will confuse the revisions to past earnings with
earnings restatements, which they aren't. Restatements stem
from error or fraud, not simple accounting changes.
Colleen Sayther Cunningham, the
president and chief executive of Financial Executives
International, a group of finance officials, said at a
conference at Baruch College last month that it could be
hard for investors to differentiate between the two.
Willens said in an interview that
while some might confuse the two types of revisions, that's
not a reason not to make the move.
The move will take effect in 2006,
though companies with fiscal years that start earlier than
that can apply it earlier if they choose.
-- Michael Rapoport (Dow Jones
Newswires)
|
From The Wall Street Journal's Accounting Weekly Review on June 3,
2005
TITLE: SEC, Heal Thyself: Tighten Controls, GAO Says in Audit
REPORTER: Siobhan Hughes
DATE: May 27, 2005
PAGE: A6
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111715362178944673,00.html
TOPICS: Audit Report, Auditing, Governmental Accounting, Internal Controls,
Sarbanes-Oxley Act, Securities and Exchange Commission
SUMMARY: Add the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) "..to the
growing list of institutions disclosing weaknesses in financial controls..."
QUESTIONS:
1.) Summarize the Sarbanes-Oxley requirements regarding internal controls
and reporting on them. (Hint: you may find it helpful to review the AICPA's
summary of the impact of this law on the accounting profession at
http://www.aicpa.org/info/Sarbanes-Oxley2002.asp
2.) Who audits the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and issued
this report? Why is the SEC audit not done by a public accounting firm? What
is the function of the entity that performed the SEC's audit?
3.) Why is it important that the SEC comply with these requirements of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act? In your answer, comment on public companies'
concerns with this law.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
Grant Thornton Battles Its Image
"No. 5 Accounting Firm Struggles To Attract Major Audit Clients, Despite
Misfortunes of Big Four," by Diya Gullapolli. The Wall Street Journal, June
9, 2005; Page C1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111828015713654985,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
For the 373 partners of Grant Thornton LLP, the
U.S.'s No. 5 accounting firm by revenue, these should be heady times.
Revenue climbed about 30% last year to $635 million, and the firm picked
up more than 1,000 new clients.
Only one thing is missing: large, publicly held
audit clients. For 2004, Grant Thornton served as the independent
auditor for just one Fortune 500 company, W.W. Grainger Inc. That's down
from two during 2003, before Countrywide Financial Corp. switched to
KPMG LLP, the smallest of the Big Four with $4.1 billion of revenue.
Then, in March, Grant Thornton Chief Executive Officer Ed Nusbaum got
the bad news. Grainger was switching to Ernst & Young LLP.
"There's this perception that somehow the Big
Four are better than we are, and that's just simply not true," Mr.
Nusbaum says. "It's a very difficult perception issue that has to be
broken."
If ever the opportunity seemed ripe to shatter
that image, it would be now. The corporate-accounting scandals of the
past four years have damaged the Big Four's reputations, class-action
lawyers are suing them over billions in shareholder losses, and criminal
probes are pending over some of their tax-shelter sales.
Instead, even though Grant has tried its
hardest with an elaborate marketing plan, the Big Four's grip on the
audits of the world's largest companies keeps tightening. KPMG, Ernst,
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and Deloitte & Touche LLP now audit all but
about a dozen of the companies in the Fortune 500.
Many investors and corporate executives
complain that the accounting industry has become too concentrated,
leaving companies with too few choices for the important job of
auditing. But the obstacles are many for Grant and other second-tier
firms as they seek to move up.
First, there is size, a reason cited by
Grainger and Countrywide in their moves: Grant's roughly 3,900 staffers
stacked up against about 18,300 at KPMG last year. Then, too, the
smaller firms aren't without their own warts: They face lawsuits over
allegedly botched audits and some of their tax-shelter sales also are
under federal scrutiny.
Most notably, Grant's former Italian arm, Grant
Thornton SpA, made headlines in recent years as an auditor for dairy
company Parmalat SpA, which filed for bankruptcy-court protection amid
$18.5 billion in missing funds. Grant says it, too, was a victim of the
fraud.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on Gran Thornton's lawsuit troubles are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#GrantThornton
"The Practitioner-Professor Link," by Bonita K. Peterson, Christie W.
Johnson, Gil W. Crain, and Scott J. Miller, Journal of Accountancy, June
2006 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/kramer.htm
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
PERIODIC FEEDBACK FROM PRACTITIONERS
to faculty about the strengths and
weaknesses of their graduates and
their program can help to positively
influence the accounting profession.
CPAs ALSO CAN INSPIRE
STUDENTS’ education by
providing internship opportunities
for accounting students, or serving
as a guest speaker in class.
MEMBERSHIP ON A UNIVERSITY’S
ACCOUNTING advisory council
permits a CPA to interact with
faculty on a regular basis and
directly affect the accounting
curriculum.
SERVING AS A “PROFESSOR FOR
A DAY” is another way a CPA
can promote the profession to
accounting students and answer any
questions they have.
CPAs CAN SUPPORT STUDENTS’
PROFESSIONAL development by
providing advice on proper business
attire and tips for preparing
resumes, and conducting mock
interviews.
CPAs CAN SHARE EXPERIENCES
with a professor to cowrite
an instructional case study for a
journal, which can reach countless
students in classrooms across the
world.
ORGANIZING OR CONTRIBUTING
to an accounting education
fund at the university can help fund
a variety of educational purposes,
such as student scholarships and
travel expenses to professional
meetings.
PARTICIPATION BY
PRACTITIONERS in the
education of today’s accounting
students is a win-win-win situation
for students, CPAs and faculty. |
|
|
Bob Jensen's threads on Accounting Research versus the Accountancy
Profession are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
June 2, 2005 message from Paul Pacter (HK - Hong Kong)
[paupacter@DELOITTE.COM.HK]
Both the SEC (US) and CESR (Europe) have issued guidance on
disclosure of non-GAAP financial information:
SEC:
http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/33-8176.htm This is a final
rule. There was some further guidance here:
http://www.sec.gov/rules/final/33-8216.htm
CESR: It is a consultation paper, comment deadline 11 July 2005:
http://www.cesr-eu.org/ then click "Consultations" or download
the paper here:
http://www.iasplus.com/europe/0505cesrnongaap.pdf
Paul Pacter
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
Business helpers from Smart Stops on the Web, Journal of Accountancy,
June 2005 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/news_web.htm
Guides for Employers
www.hr-guide.com
CPA firm owners and/or human
resources managers can find many useful links to
incentive plans, job evaluations, performance
appraisals, and staffing and training and
development information. There are links to
articles on avoiding sexual harassment claims
and accommodating the disabled, as well as
sample benefit and salary surveys and demos of
HR software.
www.winningworkplaces.org
Visitors can read articles on
workplace discrimination and recruitment,
research studies on women of color in corporate
management and tool kits on creating diversity
in the workplace and other topics at this Web
stop. Users can subscribe to the free newsletter
Winning Workplace Ideas from the Forum
link on the home page.
www.whenworkworks.org
This site, which focuses on 21st
century office trends, offers case studies and
tips on employee retention and flexible work
schedules, a communication checklist for
workers, suggestions for implementing flex-work
programs and research findings. |
|
Bob Jensen's small business helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#SmallBusiness
June 6, 2005 message from Neal Hannon
[nhannon@COX.NET]
When I introduce students to XML, I always send
them to
www.w3schools.com , and ask them to read the
XML tutorial and take the 20 question quiz at the end of the session. In
a lab environment, I allow the students to continue to take the quiz
until they achieve a score of 100%. The session introduces the basic
concepts of XML such as looking at XML as a method of applying context
to content. The lab also serves as the bridge for discussions about
other XML family markup languages, including XBRL.
For a general overview of XML, try XML: A
Manager's Guide (2nd Edition) by Kevin Dick, available at amazon.com
starting at just over $5.00 for the book in used condition. Regarding
XBRL, there will be new books published by the end of this year that
will be focused on bringing XBRL to the classroom. Watch XBRL-Public, a
free yahoo group listserv (groups.yahoo.com) for announcements of
courseware offerings.
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL
"EDGAR Online, Business Objects Provide XBRL-Enabled Solutions,"
AccountingWeb, June 3, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100968
AccountingWEB.com - Jun-3-2005 - EDGAR®
Online®, Inc. and Business Objects announced on Wednesday, June 2, the
signing of a new technology partnership in which the companies will
conduct joint sales, marketing and development activities. The
partnership provides an integrated solution enabling joint customers to
easily and quickly obtain and use financial data. Customers of the new
partnership will be able to access financial data in eXtensible Business
Reporting Language (XBRL), a royalty free, open specification using
XML-based data tags to describe financial data in business reports and
databases.
EDGAR Online’s I-Metrix suite of SXBRL products
enables financial analysts, auditors and investors to analyze financial
statement data of all companies reporting financials to the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC). The partnership agreement with Business
Objects allows EDGAR Online to market its I-Metrix suite of XBRL
products to the more than 30,000 customers worldwide of Business
Objects.
“We are extremely pleased that Business Objects
has chosen to work with EDGAR Online. The combination of Business
Objects’ business intelligence platform and the EDGAR Online I Metrix
suite of XBRL products will help our joint customers benefit from the
access to standards-based corporate financial data,” says Susan
Strausberg, EDGAR Online President and CEO.
Jon Dorrington, Business Objects’ vice
president of alliances agrees, stating “The ability to access financial
information is very important to our customers. The integration of our
industry-leading BI platform with EDGAR Online’s I-Metrix suite will
enable joint customers to more easily access and analyze their financial
data to improve performance.”
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL
What is "markdown money?"
Saks Inc., facing an investigation by the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission into the improper collection of
allowances from its vendors, disclosed an additional internal investigation
into its practices. The additional probe will determine whether Saks's
luxury chain, Saks Fifth Avenue, wrongfully collected from its vendors "chargebacks,"
or fees for failing to comply with Saks's logistics, transportation or
billing policies. The internal investigation also will review when "markdown
money" was recorded. Markdown money is the sum vendors pay retailers to
compensate stores when merchandise doesn't sell and has to go on sale, or be
"marked down."
Ellen Byron, "Saks Studies Booking of Allowances: Retailer Reviews
Accounts Of Such Revenue Up to '05, Amid an SEC Investigation," The Wall
Street Journal, June 6, 2005; Page B10 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111801216304651275,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
June 6, 2005 reply from Elliot Kamlet SUNY Account
[ekamlet@BINGHAMTON.EDU]
I've seen companies set up all kinds of
allowances. Generally, they book the full sale amount and then allow for
reductions in sales. Certainly, a high level of returns is nothing new -
for instance magazine and book distributors have such a low direct
production cost they prefer to oversell and take back or credit the
returns from the retailer.
June 6, 2005 reply from Speer, Derek
[d.speer@AUCKLAND.AC.NZ]
Bob
I suggest that this is more akin to setting up
a Provision for Repairs under Warranty. From experience vendors know
that some will occur, although they don'y know which products will be
affected nor the timing.
Derek Speer
The University of Auckland, New Zealand
June 3, 2005 message from James L. Morrison
[morrison@unc.edu]
The June/July 2005 issue of Innovate is now
available at
http://www.innovateonline.info
Innovate is a peer-reviewed, bimonthly
e-journal published as a public service by the Fischler School of
Education and Human Services at Nova Southeastern University. It
features creative practices and cutting-edge research on the use of
information technology to enhance education.
James Shimabukuro opens the issue with a
thought-provoking essay arguing that once advanced technologies have
fully liberated us from the constraints of time and place, students will
turn not to a single teacher, but to a partnership of learning advisors,
paraprofessional monitors, and peer tutors to reach their academic
goals. Marc Prensky contents that cell phones, which are portable,
powerful, and already in the hands of millions of students, are well
equipped to assist student development once educators grasp their
significance as learning tools.
Like cell phones, weblogs have obvious social
uses and less appreciated educational applications. Drawing on
pedagogical theory and personal practice, Stuart Glogoff documents the
ways in which blogging can build community, enhance knowledge
construction, and increase interactivity in both online and hybrid
courses.
New technology tools and practices are exciting
on their own, but making them work within Web-based course management
systems is often a challenge. Kay Wijekumar focuses on the best ways to
design and conduct an online course with such constraints--and proposes
software changes that would make CMSs more effective and user friendly.
Lyn Barnes, Sheila Scutter, and Janette Young follow with a description
of a pilot study using screen recording and compression software to
reinforce key content in online courses.
Ellen Cohn and Bernard Hibbitts reexamine the
traditional definition of public service and question its division from
teaching and research. They also argue that service can be just as
valuable online as in person.
David Baucus and Melissa Baucus shift our
attention to the corporate world. They review the history of corporate
universities--unique, quickly evolving environments dedicated to fast,
effective learning--and reflect on the evolution of technological
innovations that serve educational and business needs.
Stephen Downes concludes the issue with a
review of Connexions, a Rice University Web site where educators can
create learning objects, instructors can assemble them into modules and
courses, and visitors can learn from the resulting resources.
Please forward this announcement to appropriate
mailing lists and to colleagues who want to use IT tools to advance
their work.
Many thanks.
Jim ----
James L. Morrison Editor-in-Chief, Innovate
http://www.innovateonline.info
Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership UNC-Chapel
Hill
http://horizon.unc.edu
June 5, 2005 message from Jack Seward
[JackSeward@msn.com]
Bob,
You may enjoy reading the article below.
Regards,
Jack
Jack Seward New York City 917-450-9328 Fax:
212-656-1486
Jack Seward was featured in the cover story of
Accounting Today, "Bring 'em back intact! Computer forensics can
retrieve info you may not even know exists" by Stuart Khan (June 6-19,
2005).
[Excerpts taken from story] The problem is a
familiar one, but the solution is new... The phenomenon is computer
forensics - the application of computer investigation and analysis
techniques in the interest of determining potential legal evidence that
might be sought in a wide range of computer crime or misuse, including
theft of trade secrets, destruction of intellectual property and fraud.
Computer specialists can draw on an array of methods for discovering
data that reside in a computer, or recovering deleted, encrypted or
damaged file information.
Few people today know how to do it and many
[accountants] don't really understand it. Yet it is vital in today's
forensics. The bottom line is that computer forensics gives the
accountants the ability to retrieve things in an astounding way...
[Interview with Jack Seward - please see full
article]
According to Jack Seward, an expert on
e-discovery and finding hidden assets, there has been a prolific rise in
corporate and personal complexity that demands computer forensic
solutions. "This complexity is a product of electronic communications
and commerce, with the spider web of personal and corporate data
integration the common thread."
Seward pointed out that the growth in the use
of computer forensics has been unbelievable. "There is no magic pill in
computer forensics; just the regimen necessary for the discovery of the
trail left behind by digital fraudsters who are performing at the best
of their game. I had a great conversation with the national director of
forensics for one of the Big Four regarding this very point. We
reminisced how, 10 years ago, a case would involve a few computer hard
drives. Now, a case is often hundreds of hard drives, numerous servers
and tape archives. Bottom line? From the top of this mountain there is
no end in sight for computer forensics technology. After all, 92 percent
of all information created is in digital form; computer forensics is
here to stay."
Seward noted that digital or computer forensics
has proven itself in commercial litigation, discovering theft of
intellectual property and uncovering accounting frauds. "Does any
business not have electronic books and records or e-mail?"
He said that electronic data discovery in
litigation is practically mandatory. "The Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure are currently in the process of being amended to include
numerous provisions for electronic data discovery. That's not to say
e-discovery is not now being used - just that it's about to become the
law of the land."
Seward also noted that the computer forensics
cases he sees are extremely varied and include collection of judgments
after discovery of hidden assets found on hard drives, business
valuations, discovery of hidden financial information, examination of
e-mail history, electronic data discovery in commercial litigation,
recovery of deleted books and records, recovery of corrupt database
files, and recovery of print files for use in commercial litigation.
Seward related a fraud case that was slightly
atypical. "It is not often that a case goes to trial when computer
forensic evidence is used to support the allegations contained in the
court papers," he said. "This case was about greed, and the plaintiff
attempting to collect on a promissory note that was not owed. In a
jury-waiver trial that lasted 16 full trial days and 18 witnesses, the
opposition lost in the trial court and again before the appeals court.
Perhaps one of the more difficult things to do in court is to argue and
prove you do not owe the money (after you acknowledge its receipt) and
you signed a promissory note. That is prima facie grounds, and in court,
you can get ready to count, one, two, three strikes, you lose. However,
the client alleged an accord and satisfaction of the promissory note.
The client borrows the money from the plaintiff, but the client was owed
a similar amount from the plaintiff's corporation. The court found that
the plaintiff and client reached an accord and satisfaction and the
promissory note has been satisfied because of third-party trial
testimony related to the computer forensic evidence. The computer
forensic evidence was overwhelming against the plaintiff's attempt to
collect on the already satisfied promissory note and the court awarded
the client his legal fees."
Seward said that the computer forensic evidence
showed that the plaintiff caused his corporation to remove the
accounting entry for the accord and satisfaction (which had taken place
more than a year prior to the filing of he lawsuit) three days before
his scheduled deposition. "At the deposition, the plaintiff produced the
altered financial statements of the plaintiff's corporation showing the
amount was due the client, in an attempt to prove that no accord and
satisfaction had been made."
In short, he said that the electronic database
containing the books and records of the plaintiff's corporation was
recovered from a laptop. As is often the case, the database was
encrypted, but the password was decrypted in less than a minute during
the computer forensic investigation.
"The plaintiff identified the monthly financial
statements showing the mount owed the client as being the original and
correct under oath at trial. At trial, the controller for the
plaintiff's corporation and the CPA modified their deposition testimony
when shown the computer forensic evidence. They then both testified the
plaintiff's corporation books were altered to show the money was owed to
the client and this was done after the filing of the lawsuit."
Quotations and Tidbits from June 1-14, 2005
The entire Tidbits Directory is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsdirectory.htm
Music for the quiet of summer: Always
---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/always.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Without warning and out of the blue, my colleague Petrea Sandlin (the
Director of Trinity University's Accounting Program) showed up on our front
porch on Monday afternoon. She and her daughter and a wheel chair bound
friend drove over 5,000 miles through Canada to get this far east into the
White Mountains. They are doing well in spite of the cold and wet weather
that they encountered most of their trip. The weather was mostly rotten
this May.
Their next stop along the way was to be with some friends in the Green
Mountains of Vermont, that liberal state a few miles west of our back deck.
Petrea plans to be back in her office in about a week.
My Barber is from the "Old School"
My barber's name is Paul. He has a basement shop on the main street of a
village called Woodsville in western New Hampshire. He does not take
reservations and you simply allow for the possibility that you must wait
your turn. While you wait you may browse through back issues of only
magazine that Paul commenced subscribing to in in 1952 --- The National
Geographic. Paul opened this barber shop over a half century ago by
charging fifty cents for a haircut. Today the charge is only $9.00 which is
less than most barbers charge these days. We're lucky to have Paul in a
nearby village since most New Hampshire villages no longer have a barber
shop.
Paul says he's from the "old school." When I asked him what it meant by
"old school," he proudly explained as follows. "It means coming to work six
days of every week, fifty one weeks of every year, for 53 years in
succession. It means standing on your feet cutting hair from 8:30 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. each day except from 12:00 to 12:45 noon when he goes home for a
simple lunch break. It means coming to work in rain, shine, or snow even if
he feels lousy. It means making small talk with old friends and total
strangers. It means discussing the weather over and over each hour of each
day of each week of each year. It means proudly displaying a yellowed
barber college diploma alongside the mirror in front of the barber chair.
It means enjoying very simple things in life and earning every penny that it
costs to have these things."
I think I know why old Paul has subscribed so many years to The
National Geographic. Without leaving Woodsville's main street, Paul
manages to visit virtually every site on the planet and sometimes beyond the
planet earth. In the quiet lull between customers, when he can take the
load off his feet, Paul time travels to Tibet or Paris or Saturn when he
opens up one of his worn copies of The National Geographic. He time
travels instantly without the hassles of airports, burning sun, pouring
rain, insects, lost luggage, noise, thefts, and bad food. And he can return
most any time he gets an urge to see the sites over and over again.
Yesterday, Paul apologetically explained that he might not be in his shop
for a few days beginning June 14. His wife of 53 years will be having a
heart bypass surgery. Being at her side more important than opening his
shop even if he is from the "old school." I hope they have copies of The
National Geographic in the waiting room down in the Hitchcock Center at
the Dartmouth Medical School.
God bless all the older folks from "the old school."
Flashback to the Year 1900 in The Ladies Home Journal
Automobiles will be cheaper than horses are today.
Liquid-air refrigerators will keep great quantities of food fresh for long
intervals. Huge forts on wheels will dash across open spaces at the speed of
express trains of today. They will make what is now known as cavalry
charges. Hot or cold air will be turned on from spigots to regulate the
temperature of a house as we now turn on hot or cold water from spigots to
regulate the temperature of a bath. Man will see around the world. Persons
and things of all kinds will be brought within focus of...
"What in the World Will the Future Bring, " PBS, June 1, 2005 ---
http://pbskids.org/wayback/tech1900/snapshot.html
"The Fastest, Easiest Way to Transfer Files," by Walter Mossberg,
The Wall Street Journal, June 2, 2005; Page B5 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111767035411148779,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Q: What is the fastest and easiest way to
transfer files and programs when switching to a new computer? It will be
from a Windows PC to a Windows PC and I have stored a lot of music in
Musicmatch that I want to transfer over.
A: The fastest and easiest way is to use a
special "migration" program, which transfers files in bulk via a cable
that connects the two machines. When I last tested these, the best was
Detto's IntelliMover, which costs $50. More information is at
www.detto.com .
However, IntelliMover transfers only data
files, including music and settings. It doesn't move over programs, such
as Musicmatch itself. The only program I've tested that does that is
Alohabob PC Relocator Ultra, by Eisenworld (
www.eisenworld.com
). It costs $70, and it also transfers files and settings. In addition,
it can move over some, though not all, programs.
"Losing a Rental-Car Key," The Wall Street Journal, May 31, 2005;
Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111749978324446653,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
The Problem: You lost the key for a
rental car.
The Solution: The rise of sophisticated
security features on keys has made this an expensive predicament. Some
big rental agencies no longer keep spares on hand, and they may charge
you hundreds of dollars to make a new key.
Call the rental company's roadside-assistance
hotline to report the problem, and find out what your options are. You
may get lucky with an agency that still keeps spares, or can get you a
new rental car free of charge.
Then do some comparative price-shopping on your
own. If you're a member of AAA, you may be entitled to a free tow and up
to $100 off the cost of a duplicate key. Alternatively, some 24-hour
locksmiths can travel to your car and cut a new key on the spot for less
than the agency charges.
One other note: If the lost key is due to
another person's mistake, the rental agency may not hold you responsible
for the costs.
Jensen Comment: I had a spare key cut for my Jeep Cherokee in a hardware
store. The spare key would unlock the door and start the engine. But the
engine would not keep running with the spare key in the ignition. Hence, if
I lock my main key in the car, my spare key is useful. But if I lose my
main key, my spare key is not any help.
There may be a worm in your future
A team of researchers at Case Western Reserve
University have created a robotic device that moves much like a slug or
earthworm -- and it could ultimately become the ideal tool to help doctors
perform colonoscopies.
Karen Epper Hoffman, "Learning to Crawl," MIT's Technology Review,
May 31, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_053105hoffman.asp?trk=nl
Western liberalism proving to be only idea left standing
The French and Dutch rebuffs of the European Union
constitution will soon be followed by other rejections. Millions of proud,
educated Europeans are tired of being told by unelected grandees that the
mess they see is really abstract art. The E.U. constitution — and its
promise of a new Europe — supposedly offered a corrective to the
Anglo-American strain of Western civilization. More government, higher
taxes, richer entitlements, pacifism, statism and atheism would make a more
humane and powerful new continent of over 400 million to outpace a
retrograde United States. Instead, Europe faces a declining population,
unassimilated minorities, low growth, high unemployment and an inability to
defend itself, either militarily or morally. Somehow the directorate of the
European Union has figured out how to have too few citizens while having too
many of them out of work. The only question that remains is just how low
will the 100,000 bureaucrats of the European Union go in shrieking to their
defiant electorates as they stampede for the exits. In fact, 2005 is a
culmination of dying ideas. Despite the boasts and threats, almost every
political alternative to Western liberalism over the last quarter-century is
crashing or already in flames. China's red-hot economy — something like
America's of 1870, before unionization, environmentalism and federal
regulation — shows just how dead communism is. Will Vietnam, North Korea and
Cuba go out with a bang or a whimper? If North Korea's nutty communiqués,
Hugo Chavez's shouting about oil boycotts and Castro's harangues sound
desperate, it's because they all are.
Victor Davis Hanson, "Western liberalism proving to be only idea left
standing," Jewish World Review, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0605/hanson060205.php3
If you don't trust me, smell my new oxytocin cologne
Can you bottle trust? The answer, it seems, is
yes. Researchers have produced a potion that, when sniffed, makes people
more likely to give their cash to someone to look after. A Swiss-led
research team tested their creation on volunteers playing an investment game
for real money. When they inhaled the nasal spray, investors were more
likely to hand over money to a trustee, knowing that, although they could
make a hefty profit, they could also lose everything if the trustee decided
not to give any of the money back. The potion's magic ingredient is
oxytocin, a chemical that is produced naturally in the brain. Its production
is triggered by a range of stimuli, including sex and breastfeeding, and it
is known to be important in the formation of social ties, such as mating
pairs and parent-offspring bonds. It is perhaps no surprise that the
compound has been nicknamed the 'love hormone'. Experts think that oxytocin
exerts its range of effects by boosting some social behaviours: it may
encourage animals or people to overcome their natural wariness when faced
with a risky situation. The theory argues that people only decide to trust
each other - when forming a sexual or business relationship, for example -
when the brain's oxytocin production is boosted.
Michael Hopkin, "Trust in a bottle: Nasal spray makes people more likely to
place faith in another person," Nature, June 1, 2005 ---
http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050531/full/050531-4.html
What's a podcaster?
When Steve Jobs announced on May 22 that the
next version of Apple's music software and store iTunes -- due within 60
days -- would feature support for podcasting, the nascent community of
Internet-broadcast show creators was all atwitter. And for good reason:
Apple's announced support will be a signal event for the technology,
propelling it from a hobbyist's pursuit to a medium that less tech-savvy
people might explore and enjoy.
Eric Hellweg, "Pdcasters Tune Into Apple," MIT's Technology
Review, May 26, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_052605hellweg.asp?trk=nl
The Decline of Affirmative Action
Starting around 1995, the percentage of colleges
that considered students’ minority status in admissions decisions fell
dramatically — so dramatically that it appears to have gone beyond those
states where court rulings or constitutional amendments barred the use of
racial preferences. That finding comes from research being prepared for
publication by two sociologists at the University of California at Davis.
Eric Grodsky, an assistant professor there, and Demetra Kalogrides, a
graduate student, were able to document the shifts by obtaining results from
the College Board of a survey it does annually on college admissions
practices.
Scott Jaschik, "The Decline of Affirmative Action," Inside Higher Ed,
June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/02/survey
Up in Smoke: U.S. 'War on Drugs' Really War on Marijuana
The federal government spends about $35 billion a
year on the "war on drugs," largely to prosecute marijuana users – but it's
fighting a losing battle. While the number of marijuana arrests has risen
sharply since the early 1990s, the crackdown has done little to curtail the
demand for the drug. Police make about 700,000 marijuana-related arrests
each year, accounting for almost half of all drug arrests. Pot busts peaked
at 755,186 in 2003 – nearly twice the number of arrests in 1993. While
marijuana arrests rose 113 percent from 1990 to 2002, arrests for other
drugs increased only 10...
"U.S. 'War on Drugs' Really War on Marijuana," NewsMax.com, May 31,
2005 ---
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2005/5/31/120014.shtml
Adult Stem Cell Breakthrough Ignored
Scientists at Australia's Griffith University have
engineered a breakthrough in the field of adult stem cell research that's so
significant, say experts, that it could render the debate over embryonic
stem cell research moot. The results of the four year research project
showed that olfactory stem cells can be turned into heart cells, brain
cells, nerve cells, indeed almost any kind of cell in the body, without the
problems of rejection or tumors forming, a common side effect with embryonic
stem cells.
"Adult Stem Cell Breakthrough Ignored," NewsMax, May 30, 2005 ---
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2005/5/30/84930.shtml
Love in the Land of Na
For the true commitment-phobe, living among the
Na people in southwestern China would be paradise. The Na are the only known
society that completely shuns marriage. Instead, says Stephanie Coontz in
her new book, "Marriage, a History," brothers help sisters raise the
children they conceive through casual sex with nonfamily members (incest is
strictly taboo). Will we all be like the Na in the future? With divorce and
illegitimacy rates still high, the institution of marriage seems headed for
obsolescence in much of the world. Coontz, a family historian at Evergreen
State College in Washington, doesn't proclaim the extinction of marriage,
but she does argue that dramatic changes in family life over the past 30
years represent an unprecedented social revolution—and there's no turning
back. The only hope is accepting these changes and figuring out how to work
with them. The decline of marriage "doesn't have to spell catastrophe,"
Coontz says. "We can make marriages better and make nonmarriages work as
well."
"What's Love Got to Do With It? Everything: In a new book, a marriage
historian says romance wrecked family stability," Barbara Kantrowitz,
MSNBC, June 1, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8017908/site/newsweek/
It's a Wiki, Wiki World
As the old techie saying goes, it's not a bug, it's
a feature. Wikipedia is a free open-source encyclopedia, which basically
means that anyone can log on and add to or edit it. And they do. It has a
stunning 1.5 million entries in 76 languages—and counting. Academics are
upset by what they see as info anarchy. (An Encyclopaedia Britannica editor
once compared Wikipedia to a public toilet seat because you don't know who
used it last.) Loyal Wikipedians argue that collaboration improves articles
over time, just as free open-source software like Linux and Firefox is more
robust than for-profit competitors because thousands of amateur programmers
get to look at the code and suggest changes. It's the same principle that
New Yorker writer James Surowiecki asserted in his best seller The Wisdom of
Crowds: large groups of people are inherently smarter than an élite few.
Wikipedia is in the vanguard of a whole wave of wikis built on that idea. A
wiki is a deceptively simple piece of software (little more than five lines
of computer code) that you can download for free and use to make a website
that can be edited by anyone you like. Need to solve a thorny business
problem overnight and all members of your team are in different time zones?
Start a wiki. In Silicon Valley, at least, wiki culture has already taken
root. "A lot of corporations are using wikis without top management even
knowing it," says John Seely Brown, the legendary former chief scientist at
Xerox PARC. "It's a bottom-up phenomenon. The CIO may not get it, but the
people actually doing the work see the need for them."
Chris Taylor, "It's a Wiki, Wiki World: Want to add your 2˘ to an
encyclopedia? Join the crowd," Time Magazine, June 2005 ---
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1066904,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on the Wiki and Wikipedia are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Wiki
When Violence Comes To Campus Once Havens of Tolerance
For millions of Iraqis, it's a familiar concern.
The country has been facing its most deadly spasm of violence in a year:
last month alone, attacks killed more than 600 Iraqis, many of them Shi'ites
targeted by Sunni jihadis bent on sowing civil war. The country's
universities have long served as the bulwark of Iraq's secular society,
refuges from the sectarian strife that threatens to rip the country apart.
But now violence has come to the campuses. A rocket attack on an engineering
college in the heart of Baghdad two weeks ago killed two students and
injured 17 others. Bombs have been found at several colleges, leading many
universities to institute full-body searches at their gates. Radical
religious groups have infiltrated many student bodies, intimidating students
and teachers alike. Some prominent Iraqis say the surge in extremism on
campus holds grave portents for Iraq. "Once this poison enters the campus
and infects the minds of our young people," says Mohammad Jaffer
al-Samarrai, a geography professor in Baghdad, "then all hope is lost for
society."
Aparisim Ghosh, "When Violence Comes To Campus Once havens of tolerance:
Iraq's universities are becoming battlefields in an escalating civil war,"
Time Magazine, June 6, 2005 ---
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1066902,00.html
The Neal Boortz Commencement Speech
No, this speech has never been delivered at a
college or a university. It was written to protest the fact that such an
invitation has never been offered! It has only been delivered on my radio
show, printed in my book "The Terrible Truth About Liberals" and produced on
a limited edition CD. The irony is that this commencement speech has been
more widely distributed, and has been the subject of more comment than any
commencement speech that actually has been delivered at any college or
university in the past 50 years.
"The Neal Boortz Commencement Speech,"
http://boortz.com/more/commencement.html
Framingham Selectmen Censor Speech Against Illegal Aliens
Thursday night the Board of Selectmen voted and
approved a measure to keep outspoken critics of illegal immigration from
airing their concerns during the Citizen's Participation segment of the
selectmen meetings. Joseph and Jim Rizoli periodically have brought to the
attention of the board of selectmen the issue of how illegal immigration has
negatively affected the schools and hospitals in Framingham, a town where as
much as 70% of the estimated 20,000 recent immigrants from Latin American
countries are here illegally. For airing their concerns, they have been
labelled as "haters" and "xenophobes".
"Framingham Selectmen Censor Speech Against Illegal Aliens," MassNews.com,
May 30, 2005 ---
http://massnews.com/2005_editions/5_may/52705_framingham_censors.htm
Thow shalt not blog in Iran
The Unicode breakthrough helped ignite massive
growth in Internet readership in Iran. "There were all these journalists who
didn't have a venue, and all these readers who missed the reformist papers."
By last year, 5 million Iranians were using the Internet in the nation of 69
million, and an estimated 100,000 blogs. The standard fare for Iranian blogs
is similar to what you find in the US - dating, fashion, movies, and music,
plus some politics and information age theorizing. But like Levi's in
Khrushchev's Russia, such quotidian matters contain the seeds of revolution,
Derakhshan says. Maybe that's why the blog spring was crushed. At first,
"the clerics didn't really understand what they were," he says, so they
didn't bother shutting them down. But last June the Iranian judiciary put in
place a more sophisticated filtering system that blocks Iranian access to
political Web sites and blogs. (Derakhshan's traffic immediately dropped by
half.) Then in September, officials got serious, arresting, interrogating,
and even jailing some of the country's bloggers, according to human rights
groups. Two of those writers, Mojtaba Saminejad and Mohammad Reza Nasab
Abdolahi, remain in prison.
"Blog Spring," Wired Magazine, June 2006 ---
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.06/posts.html?pg=6?tw=wn_tophead_1
I've not watched the Jay Leno Show for a very long time. It's stuff like
this on his show that makes me want to miss his show forever more ---
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2670176?htv=12&htv=12
We became teachers to profess ideals and despise having to grub for a
living
I know a man who teaches at a branch campus of one
of the largest state universities in the country. He hates it. One reason:
his colleagues. Not only do many of them lack his professional seriousness
or scholarly aspirations. Some have other jobs on the side, in real estate
or auto dealerships. He tells of a few people who have worked out deals with
the English department to steer students their way who write about
difficulties with housing or cars. Academe, one of thy names is money. Not
officially of course. For public consumption, we faculty members — tenured
or adjunct — accept our salaries in the name of our responsibilities to our
students or our dedication to our discipline. Of course we all deserve more
money, although not as much as football coaches, who deserve less, and don’t
get us started on overpaid administrators. But we did not become teachers to
make money. We became teachers to profess ideals. Result? We are baffled
with the vulgar particulars of what we do make, ranging from the starting
salary we command or the pay raise we receive upon promotion to — well, to
what, exactly? In fact, aside from the special case of merit pay, the only
money virtually all of us make is represented by our respective salaries.
This is why we are so reluctant to disclose them. This is also why anybody
who actually tries to make additional money, much as my above friend’s
colleagues, makes us so uneasy, to say the least.
Terry Caesar, "Filthy Lucre," Inside Higher Ed, June 1, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/01/caesar
Tidbits forwarded by my secretary, Debbie Bowling
Graduation gown marks four generations of learning
CARLISLE,
Pennsylvania (AP) -- As Amanda Crowley crossed the stage to receive her
Dickinson College diploma, she carried a major branch of her family tree
inside her 95-year-old graduation gown.
Crowley's great-grandmother bought the wool gown
for her own commencement at Wellesley College in 1910 and passed it down to
each of her children as they graduated, an effort meant to save money during
the Great Depression.
Her act of thrift has since evolved into a
family tradition, transforming the garment into a scholarly family heirloom.
It has now traveled around the country and survived being worn by four
generations of college alumni.
To mark each occasion, white fabric tape with
each graduate's name, alma mater, and year of graduation is sewn inside the
gown. Crowley, who received a bachelor of arts degree Sunday, became the
22nd family member to experience this rite of passage.
The 21-year-old was honored to keep up the
tradition, especially since her grandmother, Mary Lee Brooks, who wore it
for her Wellesley College graduation in 1936, suffers from Parkinson's
disease and was unable to attend Dickinson's commencement.
"I felt like she was here. That in and of itself
really made the day for me," said Crowley, of Goldens Bridge, New York,
about 40 miles north of New York City. "It definitely was a lot to bear, to
have my family history on my back, but it's a great feeling."
It all began with Bertha Cottrell Lee, who was
born and raised in Mount Vernon, New York, as a member of a middle-class
family that valued higher education, according to Crowley's mother, Lynda
Crowley.
Lee studied botany at Wellesley, but also had an
active social life, as evidenced by a number of dance cards, calling cards
and invitations to faculty teas that Lynda Crowley has preserved in a
scrapbook she recently compiled on the gown.
Within a year or two after graduation, Lee
married a chiropractor and started her own family. Money was tight as each
of her three children graduated from college in the late 1930's, so she
loaned her gown to each of them and began the practice of stitching the
names inside.
Since then, it has traveled as far north as the
University of Maine and as far south as Southern Methodist University in
Dallas. And a few family members had the privilege of wearing it again upon
earning graduate degrees.
Lynda Crowley said she didn't feel terribly
sentimental about wearing the gown to her 1971 graduation from Connecticut
College, where she earned a religion degree, and did so mainly to please her
mother and grandmother.
But more recently, she has noticed that her
children, nieces and nephews are very interested in participating in the
tradition.
"It wasn't until this generation that it became
an honor. The kids fight over it now," she said.
The Associated Press, "Graduation gown marks four
generations of learning," Tuesday, May
24, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/gradgwn0525
University Presses Challenge Google
How long is a snippet? That is one of more than
a dozen questions directed at Google Inc. this week by the executive
director of the Association of American University Presses, the trade group
representing university presses. At issue is whether Google Print for
Libraries, the company's plan to digitize the collections of some of the
country's major university libraries, infringes the copyrights of the
authors of many books in those collections. The program will allow users to
search the contents of books, displaying context-specific "snippets" of the
texts of copyrighted works.
In a
letter to Google
dated Friday, the details of which were first
reported by BusinessWeek on Monday,
Peter Givler, executive director of the press association, said that Google
Print for Libraries "appears to involve systematic infringement of copyright
on a massive scale." Mr. Givler said the service has "the potential for
serious financial damage" to the members of the press association, a
collection of largely not-for-profit businesses that typically produce and
sell scholarly works of nonfiction that have relatively little commercial
potential. In a statement, Google said that it has an "active dialogue with
all of our publishing partners," adding that it protects the copyright
holders by allowing users of Google Print to view only a few short sentences
of protected text.
EDWARD WYATT, "University Presses Challenge Google," The
New York Times, Published: May 25, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/upres0525
'POSTER' BOYS FOR STUPIDITY
A Brooklyn suspect in two livery-cab stickups
redefined stupid yesterday when he walked into a police station to check on
his arrested partner-in-crime — and found himself standing in front of his
own wanted poster. It took only a split-second for the stunned cops at the
90th Precinct in Williamsburg to slap the cuffs on 20-year-old Awiey
"Chucky" Hernandez, whose picture was captured by a cab-cam during one of
the duo's alleged robberies.
"There's a wanted poster with their pictures,
right there," said an incredulous Sgt. Norman Horowitz, of the 90th Precinct
Detective Squad. "[The poster] was a couple of feet away. Obviously he did
not notice it, but we did."
Hernandez's bungle began when he went to the
station house to inquire about his cohort — 18-year-old Huquan "Guns" Gavin,
the man whose face appeared next to his on the wanted poster.
Horowitz was baffled why Hernandez would mingle
with cops after the "wanted" flier had been distributed throughout the
neighborhood.
"I can't understand how he can walk into a
station house knowing very well what they did, and their picture was
plastered all over the [neighborhood]," Horowitz said.
ERIKA MARTINEZ, "'POSTER'
BOYS FOR STUPIDITY," Free Republic (from the
New York Post), Posted
on 05/25/2005,
http://snipurl.com/stpd0525
Paying for Health Care in the Emeritus Years
Fidelity Investments and Aetna announced a new program Tuesday in which
employees at a consortium of colleges will have the chance to create special
retirement accounts to pay for health care.
The Emeriti Program
will be open to employees at the
members of Emeriti
Retirement Health Solutions, a consortium of colleges that aims for more
clout in negotiating with benefits companies by combining the employees of
their institutions. Most of the 29 members are private liberal arts
colleges, although scores of
other institutions
are considering joining, and membership will not be restricted to certain
types of colleges.
Under the program, employers and employees could
make voluntary contributions to special accounts with the employer
contributions not taxed. The funds are then invested, and upon retirement,
employees can select among several insurance plans to supplement their
Medicare coverage. Besides paying for the supplemental coverage, the
accounts can also be used to pay for some out-of-pocket medical expenses not
covered by either Medicare or the additional health insurance.
The sponsors of the new program — which they say
is the only one of its kind — say that they based it on research by the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation that found that many faculty members are worried
about paying for post-retirement health care, and that faculty members whose
institutions have generous post-retirement health benefits retire earlier
than those at other institutions.
Barbara Perry, vice president for marketing at
Emeriti, said that the program was a “strategic benefit” that colleges would
find valuable in recruiting and retaining faculty talent. She said that the
specifics of each program — such as contribution sizes — would be determined
at the campus level.
“Once you join the program as a college, you
adapt it for your institution,” she said. Perry added that while Emeriti was
started with an emphasis on liberal arts colleges, she did not see any
reason that the benefit would be less attractive at other institutions.
“This is a universal issue and institutions of all sizes are expressing
interest.”
Andy Brantley, incoming chief executive officer
of the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources,
called Emeriti “an interesting concept” because many colleges either can’t
afford to pay for retiree health insurance or worry about the rising costs
of such benefits. An approach like Emeriti “changes the dynamic” in that the
college makes a contribution, but isn’t forced to pay unknown costs at some
point down the road when insurance costs skyrocket, he said. As a result, he
said, some colleges that do nothing on health benefits for retirees may find
it viable to do something.
A spokeswoman for TIAA-CREF said that the issue
of retiree health care costs was “one of a number we are looking at,” but
that “we are more focused on the retirement savings side of the business.”
Scott Jaschik "Paying
for Health Care in the Emeritus Years," Inside Higher Ed,
May 25, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/emerti525
Smell of Grapefruit Helps Women Look Younger
A new study
shows that the fruity aroma from grapefruit may be able to shave years off a
woman's appearance.
Eau de grapefruit, anyone? Don't snicker: A new
study shows that the fruity aroma from grapefruit may be able to shave years
off your appearance.
There's a lot of prejudice against older people
in our society, says researcher Alan B. Hirsch, neurological director of the
Smell & Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago. "A lot of it is
related to how we look and how we talk. So we looked at the concept of
smell.
"In the presence of the smell of pink
grapefruit, women appear to be six years younger than their real age," says
Hirsch.
It sure beats Botox or cosmetic surgery, he
tells WebMD.
Hirsch has made a career out of smelling things
-- all sorts of things. A few years ago he found that banana, green apple,
and peppermint aromas can help you lose weight.
"We've also done studies on odors and sexual
arousal and found a positive effect," he says.
Reporting here Monday at the annual meeting of
the American Psychiatric Association, Hirsch says he recently "came to the
idea of aging."
Sadly, of the three aromas studied, only
grapefruit did the trick: Grape and cucumber odor had no effect on age
perception whatsoever, he says.
An Overpowering Sense of Smell
For the study, 37 men and women were asked to
estimate the age of a series of models in photographs while wearing masks
that were infused with the various aromas and then again while wearing a
regular surgical mask.
Overall, the grapefruit aroma made the
participants think the models were about three years younger than they
really were, Hirsch says.
But when Hirsch broke the experiment down by
sex, the picture changed.
"When women were wearing the mask, there was no
perceptible change in age," he says. "But for men wearing the mask, women
looked six years younger."
Smell fishy? Not so, says Duke University's
Marian Butterfeld, MD, MPH, chairwoman of the committee that chose which
studies would be presented at the meeting.
The findings are "intriguing," she tells WebMD,
and in line with other research that shows sex differences in the sense of
smell.
Hirsch offers up several explanations for the
phenomena. It could be that the aroma simply makes people happy and that
happy people judge others in a better light, he says.
More likely, Hirsch says, is that the grapefruit
aroma induced a smell memory-nostalgic effect. Another possibility is that
the grapefruit aroma could have sexually aroused the men, clouding their
judgment, or even could have acted as a stress buster, he says.
Butterfeld says further study is warranted.
Charlene Laino
"Smell of Grapefruit Helps Women Look Younger,"
WebMd Health, Reviewed By Brunilda
Nazario, MD on Tuesday, May 24, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/grpfrt0525
College Board Plans Changes to AP Courses
College Board Plans Changes to Popular Advanced Placement Courses Amid
Concerns Over Depth of Study
The College Board, which administers Advanced
Placement courses and the SAT, is quietly mapping out changes to some of its
flagship programs amid concerns that they cover too much content and don't
allow for in-depth study.
A team of researchers at the University of
Oregon in Eugene is leading a re-examination of AP courses in U.S. history,
biology, chemistry, physics, European history, world history and
environmental science.
The courses are designed to let high school
students test out of entry-level courses in college. Nationwide, AP
participation is booming, with one in five high school students taking an AP
course and exam last year, up from 16 percent in 2000.
Research has shown that scoring well on an AP
test is a strong predictor of college success, and the Bush administration
has made the increasing participation in AP courses a source of pride,
especially among minorities.
But the current model for shaping AP courses
through a broad survey of the curriculum of college classes in a particular
subject "doesn't help us address the concern that AP courses require too
much content coverage," said Trevor Packer, Advanced Placement executive
director.
"We recognize that simply having a course that
requires a teacher to cover a lot of content is not the same as the
best-level college course, in which teachers are facilitating in-depth
study," Packer said.
Over the next year, staff members at the
University of Oregon's Center for Education Policy Research will recruit
2,500 college faculty members in the seven subjects at about 100 schools
across the country to detail the material they're teaching to college
freshmen.
Researchers will then identify college courses
in each of those subjects to serve as a "best practices" teaching model for
AP high school classes.
Packer said this will be the first time the
nonprofit College Board has tried to single out the best courses in the
field to use as a model for AP course development.
Eventually, plans call for putting all 34 of
AP's courses through the "best practices" model, said University of Oregon
Professor David Conley.
Packer said changes spurred by the work done by
Conley's team could come to AP courses by the 2008-2009 school year,
allowing enough time for textbook and lab materials to be updated.
AP tests in the seven subjects would evolve too,
he said.
Conley said he could foresee even greater
changes to AP courses in the future; perhaps someday AP tests will include
work samples done in the classroom for college admissions offices to review,
he said.
Additionally, Conley's team has just finished
analyzing the College Board's standards for math and science testing, asking
faculty who teach entry-level math and science courses at 350 schools to
compare their teaching to what is being asked of students taking tests such
as the SAT and the PSAT. A similar analysis of English standards begins this
fall.
Eventually, the plan could be for SAT-takers to
get not just their test scores back from the College Board, but also
information about what specific areas they need to improve upon to be
considered college-ready, Conley said.
JULIA SILVERMAN Associated Press Writer, "College Board Plans Changes to
AP Courses," ABC News, May 25,
2005,
http://snipurl.com/ap0525
TIDBITS MAY 27, 2005
The Secret Passages In CIA's
Backyard Draw Mystery Lovers
'Da Vinci
Code' Has Many Trying to Decipher Secret Of the Kryptos Sculpture
ANGLEY, Va. -- The big mystery at the Central
Intelligence Agency, sitting in a sunny corner of the headquarters
courtyard, begins this way: "EMUFPHZLRFAXYUSDJKZLDKRNSHGNFIVJ."
That's the first line of the
Kryptos sculpture, a 10-foot-tall, S-shaped copper scroll perforated with
3-inch-high letters spelling out words in code. Completed 15 years ago,
Kryptos, which is Greek for "hidden," at first attracted interest mainly
from government code breakers who quietly deciphered the easier parts
without announcing their findings publicly.
Now, many mystery lovers around
the world have joined members of the national-security establishment in
trying to crack the rest. So far, neither amateurs nor pros have been able
to do it.
The latest scramble was set off by
"The Da Vinci Code," the thriller about a modern-day search for the Holy
Grail. On the book's dust jacket, author Dan Brown placed clues that hint at
Kryptos's significance. The main one is a set of geographic coordinates that
roughly locate the sculpture. (One of the coordinates is off slightly, for
reasons that Mr. Brown so far has kept secret.) A game at
www.thedavincicode.com1 suggests
that Kryptos is a clue to the subject of Mr. Brown's as-yet-unpublished next
novel, "The Solomon Key."
Gary Phillips, 27 years old, a
Michigan computer programmer, started researching Kryptos last year, hours
after learning about its Da Vinci Code connection. "Once it pulls you in,
you just can't stop thinking about it," he says. Eventually, Mr. Phillips
says, he let a struggling software business go under and took a construction
job so he would have more time for solving Kryptos.
The quest to solve the fourth and
final passage of Kryptos's message has spawned several Web sites --
including Mr. Phillips's -- as well as an online discussion group that has
more than 500 members. The discussion group was founded by Gary Warzin, who
heads Audiophile Systems Ltd. in Indianapolis. He became fascinated with
Kryptos after visiting the CIA in 2001. But after months of trying to crack
the code on his own, Mr. Warzin -- whose other hobbies include escaping from
straitjackets -- decided he needed help.
Kryptos devotees are intrigued by
the three passages that have been deciphered so far. They appear to offer
clues to solving the sculpture's fourth passage, and possibly to locating
something buried.
Sculptor James Sanborn, Kryptos's
creator, says he wrote or adapted all three. The first reads, "Between
subtle shading and the absence of light lies the nuance of iqlusion." Jim
Gillogly, a California computer researcher believed to be the first person
outside the intelligence world to solve the first three parts, came up with
the translation, which includes the deliberate misspelling of the word
illusion.
The second passage, more
suggestive, reads in part, "It was totally invisible. How's that possible?
They used the Earth's magnetic field. The information was gathered and
transmitted undergruund to an unknown location. Does Langley know about
this? They should: it's buried out there somewhere." That passage is
followed by geographic coordinates that suggest a location elsewhere on the
CIA campus.
The third decoded passage is based
on a diary entry by archaeologist Howard Carter, on the day in 1922 when he
discovered the tomb of the ancient Egyptian King Tutankhamen. It reads in
part, "With trembling hands I made a tiny breach in the upper left-hand
corner. And then, widening the hole a little, I inserted the candle and
peered in. The hot air escaping from the chamber caused the flame to
flicker, but presently details of the room within emerged from the mist. Can
you see anything?" Mr. Sanborn confirms that the translations are accurate.
In addition to deliberate
misspellings, there are letters slightly higher than others on the same
line. Other possible clues are contained in smaller parts of the work
scattered around the CIA grounds. Made of red granite and sheets of copper,
these are tattooed with Morse code that spells out phrases like "virtually
invisible" and "t is your position." In addition, a compass needle carved
onto one of the rocks is pulled off due north by a lodestone that Mr.
Sanborn placed nearby.
Those poring over the puzzle these
days are thought to include national-security workers as well as retirees,
computer-game players and cryptogram fans. Some devotees believe Kryptos
holds profound significance as a portal into the wisdom of the ancients.
More typical is Jennifer Bennett,
a 27-year-old puzzle aficionado who works as a poker-room supervisor near
Seattle. She came across the Kryptos mystery last year while on maternity
leave, as she searched for online games to play. Now back at work, she still
spends an hour a day on Kryptos after her children have gone to bed. Like
most would-be code breakers, she relies on pencil and paper.
Others, like Mr. Gillogly, the
California code breaker, are partial to computers. Semiretired, he spent 30
years at the Rand Corp., then had his own software business. He estimates
that his computers have tried at least 100 billion possible solutions to the
fourth passage over the years. His main computer these days, he says, is a
1.7 GHz laptop with a Pentium 4 processor.
Experts say the fourth passage --
known to insiders as "K4" -- is written in a more complex and difficult code
than the first three, one designed to mask patterns of recurring letters
that code breakers look for.
Efforts at finding a solution have
grown increasingly elaborate. Elonka Dunin, an executive at St. Louis
computer-game company Simutronics, has hunted down other encoded sculptures
by Mr. Sanborn in search of recurring themes. Some, like researcher Chris
Hanson, who runs a company that makes software for constructing 3D landscape
models, have mapped the CIA's headquarters or built virtual replicas of
Kryptos.
Mr. Sanborn has grown
uncomfortable with some of the attention his work is getting, particularly
from those who see religious overtones. "I don't want my work manipulated in
such a way that its meaning is somehow transformed," the Kryptos sculptor
says. He dismisses any religious connotations or allusions to beliefs of the
ancients.
A spokeswoman for Dan Brown
referred questions to Doubleday, his publisher, explaining that he's at work
on his new novel and "incommunicado." A spokesman for Doubleday declined to
comment.
Mr. Sanborn, who lives and works
in Washington, burnished his reputation with Kryptos. He has exhibited
around the world, including at the Hirshhorn Museum and Corcoran Gallery of
Art. His more recent work has focused on the early development of atomic
weapons, employing actual equipment from the Los Alamos National Laboratory.
He had no formal training in
cryptography when he created Kryptos, but worked with a retired CIA
official, Ed Scheidt, who was starting up an encryption-software business,
TecSec Inc. Mr. Sanborn says he withheld the full solution to the puzzle
from Mr. Scheidt, as well as from the CIA itself. An agency spokesman says
he isn't aware of anyone having solved the fourth passage.
Despite the struggles of would-be
code breakers, Mr. Sanborn insists the puzzle can be solved, and teases them
by saying that one clue overlooked so far is sitting in plain view. "The
most obvious key to the sculpture, nobody has picked up on."
JOHN D. MCKINNON , "The Secret Passages
In CIA's Backyard Draw Mystery Lovers," The Wall Street Journal,
May 27, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/code0527
Plan to Gather Student Data Draws Fire
As the Senate moves to complete the spending
bill for the Higher Education Act next month, a growing number of
organizations concerned about privacy rights are fighting a Department of
Education plan that would require colleges and universities to place
personal information on individual students into a national database
maintained by the government.
If included in the spending measure, the plan
would radically change current practice by requiring schools to provide
personal information on all students, not just those receiving federal aid.
Submissions would include every student's name
and Social Security number, along with sex; date of birth; home address;
race; ethnicity; names of every college course begun and completed;
attendance records; and financial aid information.
Such detailed information is now provided only
for students receiving federal aid, giving the department only a partial
picture of higher education nationwide. The new approach, department
officials say, would not only complete the picture but also help track
students who take uncommon paths toward a degree.
"Forty percent of students now enroll in more
than one institution at some point during their progress to a degree," said
Grover Whitehurst, director of the department's Institute of Education
Sciences, which devised the plan. "The only way to accurately account for
students who stop out, drop out, graduate at a later date or transfer out is
with a system that tracks individual students across and within
post-secondary institutions."
It is not clear whether the proposal has enough
momentum - or even a sponsor - to be added by the Senate. The House version
did not include the plan, and Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio,
chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, has spoken against
it.
Concerned that the plan could emerge through the
Senate, opponents are trying to kill it before it gains any traction.
"Our belief is that the department, itself, is
both unconstitutional and a relic of the last century that should not exist,
let alone create new databases," said Michael Ostrolenk, education policy
director for two conservative groups, EdWatch and Eagle Forum. "I don't
trust the government with databases with private information on citizens."
Jim Dempsey, executive director of the Center
for Democracy and Technology, said: "Once a database is created for one
purpose, regardless how genuine or legitimate it is, it's very, very hard to
prevent it from being used for law enforcement or intelligence purposes. If
the F.B.I. comes calling, it almost doesn't matter what the privacy policy
is. They'll get the information they want."
Indeed, the feasibility report permits the
attorney general and the Department of Justice to gain access to the
database "in order to fight terrorism." Backers of the proposal, while
acknowledging the privacy concerns, say that the benefits of having more
information about students outweigh the risks, especially for lawmakers who
oversee federal aid programs.
MICHAEL JANOFSKY "Plan to Gather Student Data Draws
Fire," The New York Times, May 27, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/dtabse0527
Vietnam vets’ poet laureate dies, Steve
Mason, 65, had been battling cancer
Steve Mason, poet laureate of the Vietnam Veterans
of America, died Wednesday at his home in Ashland, surrounded by friends and
family. He was 65. He had been battling cancer.
No service is planned. Arrangements will be
handled by Memory Gardens Mortuary, Medford.
A former Army captain and decorated veteran,
Mason moved back to Ashland last year after living there earlier and then
being away for several years.
He is the author of three books of poetry:
"Johnny’s Song" (1986), "Warrior for Peace" (1988) and "The Human Being — A
Warrior’s Journey Toward Peace and Mutual Healing" (1990).
His poem "The Wall Within" was delivered at the
dedication of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., 1984 and
read into the Congressional Record the same year.
Mason’s poems mix plain-spoken declarations of
feeling and startling metaphors with a stream-of-consciousness style and the
rhythms of everyday speech.
Mason’s poem "The Wall Within" begins like this:
Most real men/ hanging tough/ in their early
forties/ would like the rest of us to think/ they could really handle one
more war/ and two more women./ But I know better./ You have no more lies to
tell./ I have no more dreams to believe.
He wrote on an old Underwood typewriter, often
completing a poem in a single sitting.
Whatever came out, he said, was the poem. He
didn’t re-write.
"Johnny’s Song" had a first printing of 35,000,
an almost unheard of number for a book of poetry.
He co-wrote "Moths and Violets," a volume of
love poems published in 1974.
Mason came home from Vietnam in 1967. Although
he said he had no drug or alcohol problems, he blamed post-traumatic stress
disorder for the breakup of his marriage a year later. He once said the
trauma of war is "like an elephant on your nose."
Mason’s friends held a poetry event for him in
September at Stage Works in Ashland. Actors from the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival and others read from his work, and proceeds were given to a group
that helps veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Borges, "Vietnam
vets’ poet laureate dies, Steve Mason, 65, had been battling cancer,"
Free Republic, May 27, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/poet0527
Survey: Northeast has dumbest drivers
Test shows 1 in 10 licensed U.S. drivers don't know basic rules. In the
East, 20 percent fail quiz.
When faced with a written test, similar to ones given to beginning
drivers applying for licenses, one in ten drivers couldn't get a passing
score, according to a study commissioned by GMAC Insurance.
The GMAC Insurance National Driver's Test found that nearly 20 million
Americans, or about 1 in 10 drivers, would fail a state driver's test if
they had to take one today. GMAC Insurance is part of General Motors'
finance subsidiary, GMAC.
More than 5,000 licensed drivers between the ages of 16 and 65 were
administered a 20-question written test designed to measure basic knowledge
about traffic laws and safety. They were also surveyed about their general
driving habits.
Drivers in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic states did worst. Twenty
percent of test-takers failed there.
The state of Rhode Island leads the nation in driver cluelessness,
according to the survey. The average test score there was 77, just eight
points above a failing grade.
Those in neighboring Massachusetts were second worst and New Jersey,
third worst.
Northwestern states had the most knowledgeable drivers. In those states,
just one to three percent failed the test. Oregon and Washington drivers
knew the rules of the road best. In Oregon, the average test score was 89.
According to the study, many drivers find basic practices, such as
merging and interpreting road signs, difficult.
For instance, one out of five drivers doesn't know that a pedestrian in a
crosswalk has the right of way, and one out of three drivers speeds up to
make a yellow light, even when pedestrians are present, the study said.
Drivers not only lack basic road knowledge, but exhibit dangerous driving
behavior as well.
"As a nation of drivers, we've made little progress in the past 10 years
to curb some of the most dangerous driving behaviors, including drinking and
driving and speeding," said Susan Ferguson, senior vice president of
research at the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.
One out of 10 drivers regularly exceeds the speed limit by 11 or more
miles per hour, with drivers aged between 18 and 24 years showing the
greatest propensity for speeding, the study said.
Speeding increases both the likelihood of an accident and the severity of
the crash, the company added, citing research from IIHS.
Younger drivers are the most likely to fail a written driving test while
those between the ages of 50 and 64 are the most likely to pass.
Scores for 48 states and Washington, D.C.
NEW YORK (CNN/Money), "Survey: Northeast has dumbest drivers,"
CNN.com, May 27, 2005,
http://www.cnn.com/2005/AUTOS/05/26/drivers_study/index.html
Boom in Alberta Oil Sands Fuels
Pipeline Dreams
As Routes
Reach Capacity, Race Is On to Link Fields To West Coast and China
FORT MCMURRAY, Alberta -- Canada, with its vast
oil-sands resource, is gearing up to export more crude oil than ever before.
But with Canada's pipelines just about full, the burgeoning oil-sands
industry is running into a bottleneck.
That has touched off a new race:
to build massive, expensive pipelines that will carry expanding oil
production from this isolated region in northern Alberta hundreds of miles
over mountains and forests to the Pacific Coast and major oil-thirsty
markets, especially China and the U.S. West Coast.
The winner among the pipeline
companies could have the best chance to tap new markets and sign up
customers. The companies could also establish themselves as intermediaries
between Canada's burgeoning oil-sands region and Chinese energy companies,
which have been seeking reserves world-wide to meet that nation's surging
energy needs.
Last month, Enbridge Inc. of
Calgary, Alberta, signed an agreement to share the costs of building a 2.5
billion Canadian dollar, or about US$2 billion, pipeline, called the Gateway
Pipeline, with China state oil company PetroChina Co. Terasen Inc., based in
Vancouver, British Columbia, and the only company already operating an oil
pipeline from Alberta to Canada's West Coast, has proposed a rival C$2
billion plan to expand the existing pipeline and plans a second, new line.
The companies also plan projects
along their more traditional routes to the U.S. market through the northern
Midwest. But the westbound projects, which would open up new markets for oil
sands, promise to be at the same time more lucrative and potentially more
difficult. The pipeline companies already are negotiating with Native
American bands for land-use rights, gearing up for the expense and technical
complexities of the big projects and facing the concerns of
environmentalists.
"We're very concerned about the
pace and extent of oil-sands development. All aspects of the environment are
becoming stressed because of cumulative impact," says Chris Severson Baker,
a spokesman for the Pembina Institute, an Alberta-based environmental group.
Oil sands are gritty deposits of
tar-like bitumen, and Canada's deposits are now recognized as the biggest
source of crude oil outside Saudi Arabia. Extracting and processing sticky
bitumen is much more expensive than producing and refining conventional
crude, but global supply concerns have pushed crude prices to about $50 a
barrel and made bitumen projects more economically viable.
Producers have announced plans to
invest some C$80 billion in development of Alberta's oil sands, according to
the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers in Calgary, and they expect
to double production to about two million barrels a day from oil sands by
roughly the end of this decade. Some of the world's biggest energy companies
are involved, including Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch/Shell Group.
Enbridge wants to build a new
pipeline from northern Alberta to a proposed deep-water tanker terminal at
Prince Rupert or Kitimat, on the northern British Columbia coast. Either
port could accommodate the massive oil tankers with capacities exceeding
250,000 metric tons, or roughly 1.6 million barrels, to ship to China.
Under its agreement with Enbridge,
PetroChina will commit to renting pipeline capacity for 200,000 barrels of
oil a day, or half of the Gateway Pipeline's total capacity, which would
effectively underwrite half the project's costs. Enbridge has also said it
is willing to sell up to a 49% interest in Gateway to one or more equity
partners.
Enbridge Vice President Richard
Sandahl said his company and PetroChina are in talks to firm up terms of
their agreement, which might include PetroChina acquiring a minority stake
in the project. "It wasn't an easy commitment for the Chinese to make, but
diversification and security of oil supply are priority issues to them," he
said.
Enbridge President and Chief
Executive Patrick D. Daniel said three years of preliminary discussions with
landowners, including Native American groups, along the proposed pipeline's
route haven't raised any insurmountable issues. Nonetheless, evidence of the
land-access difficulties facing pipeline projects was brought starkly into
focus earlier this month when a group of major energy companies abruptly
halted preconstruction work on a northern natural-gas pipeline, due in part
to lack of progress on reaching agreements with aboriginal groups.
Andrew George, lands and resources
director of the Office of the Wet'suwet'en, says the five northern British
Columbia native clans that his organization represents want to be involved
in detailed consultations on Enbridge's pipeline project "from the get-go,
at a strategic level, when the big decisions are made." He said the group
has held only preliminary talks with Enbridge.
Terasen's pipeline project, to
expand its TransMountain Pipe Line from Alberta to Vancouver, is set to
begin next year. The expansion would take pipeline capacity to 300,000
barrels a day by the end of 2008 from 225,000, and to as much as 850,000
barrels a day in potential future project stages. Because the Vancouver oil
terminal can't handle very large crude tankers, most of the additional
Canadian oil shipments would initially go to California or the U.S. Pacific
Northwest on small vessels. Later the company would build a second line to
Prince Rupert or Kitimat, to accommodate oil exports to Asia.
TAMSIN CARLISLE, "Boom
in Alberta Oil Sands Fuels Pipeline Dreams," The Wall Street Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page A2,
http://snipurl.com/oil0531
Tires Get An Expiration Date
Drivers who know to check tires
for worn treads and low air pressure now have something else to worry about:
vintage.
Ford Motor Co., in a move roiling
the tire industry, has started urging consumers to replace tires after six
years. The car maker says its research shows that tires "degrade over time,
even when they are not being used." That means even pristine-looking spares
that have never left the trunk should be pitched after a half-dozen years.
That's a radical concept in the
staid U.S. tire business, which insists there's no scientific evidence to
support a "use by" date for tires. It would also surprise most motorists,
who are taught that a tire's lifespan is measured mainly by tread depth. The
tire industry says that tires are safe as long as the tread depth is a
minimum of 1/16th of an inch, no matter what the age, and there are no
visible cuts, signs of uneven wear, bulges or excessive cracking. Other
trouble signs are if tires create vibration or excessive noise.
"Tires are not milk," says Daniel
Zielinski, a spokesman for the Rubber Manufacturers Association, the tire
industry's main trade group.
For many consumers, the issue
never comes up, since passenger-car tires last an average of 44,000 miles --
meaning they are usually replaced before hitting the six-year mark. But many
people simply assume that unused spare tires -- even those that are a decade
old -- are as durable as brand-new tires, and sometimes use those spares as
full-time replacements for the regular tires. Classic-car buffs and others
who drive only infrequently could also be affected by the latest research.
In its new stance on tire safety,
Ford is getting some support from other researchers. Sean Kane, president of
Safety Research & Strategies Inc., an auto-safety research firm working with
lawyers who are preparing lawsuits arising from accidents thought to be
linked to aging tires, says older tires are a road hazard. Mr. Kane's group
has collected a list of 70 accidents involving older tires, which resulted
in 52 deaths and 50 serious injuries.
In a sense, the U.S. car industry
is just catching up to global standards. Many European car makers as well as
Japan's Toyota Motor Corp. have long warned drivers, including those who buy
their cars in the U.S., that tires are perishable. Many of them also use a
six-year threshold for the age of a tire.
DaimlerChrysler AG has already
adopted a position parallel to Ford. The car maker's Mercedes division had
been telling drivers that tires last only six years. But starting last fall,
the Chrysler group began including such a warning in 2005 owner's manuals.
"We did do some research and we found that's just a pretty safe and steady
guideline," says Curtrise Garner, a Chrysler spokeswoman, adding that "it's
a recommendation, not a must-do."
Other car makers are also taking
up this question, and some are reaching a different conclusion than Ford.
General Motors Corp. spokesman Alan Adler says GM has discussed the aging
issue, but doesn't have any research that supports a move to such a
guideline. "We're not joining in the six-years-is-the-magic-number thing
right now," he says.
The age of tires already appears
on tires, but as part of a lengthy code that is difficult for average
consumers to decipher. To find the age of a tire, look for the letters DOT
on the sidewall (indicating compliance with applicable safety standards set
by the U.S. Department of Transportation). Adjacent to these letters is the
tire's serial number, which is a combination of up to 12 numbers and
letters. The last characters are numbers that identify the week and year of
manufacture. For example, 1504 means the fifteenth week of the year 2004.
Not only are the numbers difficult
to interpret, but they can be hard to locate: The numbers are printed on
only one side of the tire, which sometimes is the one facing inward when the
tire is mounted on a wheel.
Ford's new stance on tire aging is
a direct outgrowth of the Firestone tire recall that began in August 2000.
That episode involved Firestone tires failing suddenly, mostly on Ford
Explorers, leading to a wave of deadly crashes. The crashes sparked a series
of lawsuits, including monetary and personal-injury claims, some of which
are pending.
Ford's new position won't affect
those lawsuits. But it could play a role in future legal action. Some
attorneys who have sued over the Firestone case are now mounting cases that
focus on tire age.
John Baldwin, a Ford materials
scientist who studied the root cause of the Firestone problems and has
spearheaded the car maker's continuing research on tire aging, says Ford's
intention is to develop a test to help prevent another Firestone-type
debacle. He says Ford's research into the Firestone problem showed that as
tires age, the chemistry of the rubber changes as oxygen migrates through
the carcass of the tire. This leads to a weakening of the internal structure
that can result in tire failures. Driving in hot climates or frequent heavy
loading of vehicles speeds this aging process, he says.
In April, Ford posted a warning on
its Web site saying that "tires generally should be replaced after six years
of normal service." The company also plans to include similar wording in
owner's manuals starting with the 2006 model year.
Firestone spokeswoman Christine
Karbowiak says the company can't comment on Ford's new recommendation,
because it hasn't seen Ford's research.
Tire makers certainly don't want
to see the six-year rule become any more deeply ingrained. While it might
seem that putting a limit on the lifespan of tires would be a boon to tire
makers, who would presumably sell more tires, the costs and complications it
could create are considerable. Among other things, the industry is worried
about the logistical problems that would arise if customers suddenly started
demanding only the "freshest" tires. In some cases, tires take months to
move through distribution channels from factories -- through wholesalers,
and then on to retail outlets.
"We don't have any data to support
an expiration date [for tires]," says Mr. Zielinski of the RMA. He agrees
that age can be a factor in tire performance, but says it shouldn't be used
as the sole reason to determine that a tire is no longer usable.
Mr. Zielinski says Ford went
public with its position without sharing its research with the tire
association or individual tire makers. Ford, in turn, says that it presented
its research in trade publications and at a series of public forums,
including a technical meeting of the rubber division of the American
Chemical Society in San Antonio, Texas, two weeks ago. Ford has also given
its research to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which is
developing a test to simulate the effects of aging on tires.
Ford's test involves putting
inflated tires into an oven for weeks at a time. The tires are then taken
out and studied to see, among other things, how well the layers of rubber
hold together.
Strategic Research wants tires to
be labeled more clearly with the date they were produced, so consumers can
better identify older tires and, ultimately, an explicit expiration date.
TIMOTHY AEPPEL, "Tires
Get An Expiration Date," The Wall Street Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/tires0531
Long-Dormant Threat Surfaces: Deaths From Hepatitis C
Are Expected to Jump
In the coming decade, thousands
of baby boomers will get sick from a virus they unknowingly contracted years
ago.
Some 8,000 to 10,000 people die
each year from complications related to hepatitis C, the leading cause of
chronic liver disease and liver transplants. The virus is spread through
contact with contaminated blood, usually from dirty needles or, less often,
unprotected sex. The symptoms can include jaundice, abdominal pain and
nausea.
In recent decades the number of
new hepatitis C infections in the U.S. has plummeted -- falling 90% since
1989, the result of improved screening of the blood supply and less sharing
of needles by drug users.
But the number of deaths related
to hepatitis C is expected to triple in the next 10 years, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's because symptoms lie
fallow for decades after infection. Many of the people getting sick today
contracted the virus from the mid-1960s through the 1980s, when infection
rates skyrocketed. Infectious-disease experts say their patients are mainly
baby boomers who probably caught the virus from risky behavior in their
youth.
"The majority of my patients
experimented with drugs during the '60s and '70s and now work on Wall
Street," says Robert S. Brown Jr., medical director for the Center for Liver
Disease and Transplantation at New York Presbyterian Hospital. In fact,
two-thirds of people with hepatitis C are white, male baby boomers who live
above the poverty line, according to the CDC.
As many as four million people in
the U.S. have been infected with hepatitis C, and world-wide 130 million
people have the virus. About 20% clear the virus without the help of drugs.
But most people carry the virus for years without knowing it -- delaying
treatment and possibly risking infecting others.
The Centers for Disease Control
estimates 60% of hepatitis C patients acquired the virus by sharing dirty
needles and syringes while doing drugs. Another 15% got the virus through
unprotected sex, and 10% have been infected through blood transfusions that
occurred before 1992 when a test for the virus was developed. Although rare,
especially in the U.S., hepatitis C can be transmitted through contaminated
devices used for tattoos, body piercing and manicures. There have also been
outbreaks in hospitals when infection-control procedures failed.
Current drug treatments have made
major strides in the past decade, but still work on only about 50% of those
suffering from chronic hepatitis C. The treatment goal is to reduce the
amount of virus in the blood in order to prevent cirrhosis and end-stage
liver disease.
Roche Holding AG of Basel,
Switzerland, is the market leader in treating hepatitis C, followed by
Schering-Plough Corp. of Kenilworth, N.J. Both companies market a
combination therapy using the antiviral drug ribavirin and pegylated
interferons, which are proteins that boost the immune system. The treatment
is no fun: Patients endure weekly injections and daily pills for 48 weeks
with flu-like side effects.
Promising new treatments that may
benefit more patients and have fewer side effects are on the horizon. Two
small biotech companies, Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Idenix
Pharmaceuticals Inc., both of Cambridge, Mass., have drug trials under way,
though treatments probably won't be available to patients for several years.
Earlier this month, Indenix announced that in a small clinical trial, its
drug -- either alone or combined with currently available treatments --
slashed the level of hepatitis C virus in the blood in most patients. Vertex
announced results earlier this month from a preliminary trial involving 34
patients: Five of the participants tested negative for the hepatitis C virus
within two weeks of beginning treatment.
Hepatitis C is just one among a
several hepatitis viruses, including hepatitis A, B, D and E. Hepatitis A is
very contagious and is spread via contaminated water and food. But it can be
prevented with a vaccine and isn't life threatening. Hepatitis B can also be
prevented with a vaccine. It is similar to C, though it is more contagious
and more likely to be transmitted sexually. Hepatitis D and E are very rare
in the U.S.
There is no vaccine to prevent
hepatitis C. The virus was discovered only in 1989, and it wasn't until 1992
that a blood test was developed to detect it. The CDC says that 80% of those
infected never have symptoms. In later stages of the disease, the virus can
lead to cirrhosis, a buildup of scar tissue that blocks blood flow through
the organ. At this stage, many patients need a liver transplant to survive.
In March 2001, Larkin Fowler was
working in mergers and acquisitions for J.P. Morgan when he learned through
a blood test required to join a gym at work and a subsequent doctor's visit
that he had hepatitis C.
Mr. Fowler, now 35, believes he
was infected either in 1989 or 1998. In 1989, he and some fellow college
fraternity members went on a road trip to a football game. "A few too many
cocktails and the next thing you know we all had frat tattoos," says Mr.
Fowler. In 1998, he broke his leg while traveling in Bora Bora and received
several shots in a hospital there. Mr. Fowler thinks it is more likely he
was infected by a dirty needle while receiving medical care in Bora Bora.
Mr. Fowler completed his treatment
in May 2002. He would take his weekly injections on Friday mornings and by
the evening often be in bed with a high fever and chills. But the treatment
worked and he has since been free of the virus.
PAUL DAVIES, "Long-Dormant
Threat Surfaces: Deaths From Hepatitis C Are Expected to Jump," The
Wall Street Journal,
May 31, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/hepc0531
Despite Vow, Drug Makers Still Withhold Data
When the drug industry came under fire last
summer for failing to disclose poor results from studies of antidepressants,
major drug makers promised to provide more information about their research
on new medicines. But nearly a year later, crucial facts about many clinical
trials remain hidden, scientists independent of the companies say.
Within the drug industry, companies are sharply
divided about how much information to reveal, both about new studies and
completed studies for drugs already being sold. The split is unusual in the
industry, where companies generally take similar stands on regulatory
issues.
Eli Lilly and some other companies have posted
hundreds of trial results on the Web and pledged to disclose all results for
all drugs they sell. But other drug makers, including
Merck and
Pfizer, release less
information and are reluctant to add more, citing competitive pressures.
As a result, doctors and patients lack critical
information about important drugs, academic researchers say, and the
companies can hide negative trial results by refusing to publish studies, or
by cherry-picking and highlighting the most favorable data from studies they
do publish.
"There are a lot of public statements from drug
companies saying that they support the registration of clinical trials or
the dissemination of trial results, but the devil is in the details," said
Dr. Deborah Zarin, director of
clinicaltrials.gov, a Web site financed by
the National Institutes of Health that tracks many studies.
Journal editors and academic scientists have
pressed big drug makers to release more information about their studies for
years. But the calls for more disclosure grew stronger after reports last
year that several companies had failed to publish studies that showed their
antidepressants worked no better than placebos.
In August,
GlaxoSmithKline
agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle a suit by Eliot Spitzer, the New York
attorney general, alleging that Glaxo had hidden results from trials showing
that its antidepressant Paxil might increase suicidal thoughts in children
and teenagers. At a House hearing in September, Republican and Democratic
lawmakers excoriated executives from several top companies, including Pfizer
and
Wyeth, for hiding
study results. In response, many companies promised to do better.
At the same time, Merck and Pfizer have been
criticized for failing to disclose until this year clinical trial results
that indicated that cox-2 painkillers like Vioxx might be dangerous to the
heart.
Drug makers test their medicines in thousands of
trials each year, and federal laws require the disclosure of all trials and
trial results to the F.D.A. While too complex for many patients to
understand, the trial results are useful to doctors and academic scientists,
who use them to compare drugs and look for clues to possible side effects.
But companies are not required to disclose trial results to scientists or
the public.
Some scientists and lawmakers say new rules are
needed, and a bill that would require the companies to provide more data was
introduced in the Senate in February. So far no hearings have been scheduled
on the legislation. The bill's prospects are uncertain, said a co-sponsor,
Senator Christopher J. Dodd, Democrat of Connecticut.
The drug makers have been criticized both for
failing to provide advance notice of clinical trials before they begin and
for refusing to publish completed trial results for medicines that are
already being sold.
The two issues are related, because companies
cannot easily hide the results of trials that have been disclosed in
advance, said Dr. Alan Breier, chief medical officer of Lilly, the company
that has gone furthest in disclosing results.
"You're registering a trial - at some point, the
results have got to show up," Dr. Breier said. He added that disclosing
trial results was important both to give doctors and patients as much
information as possible and to improve the industry's reputation, which has
been damaged by several recent withdrawals of high-profile drugs.
"Fundamentally, what we're doing is in the
interest of patients, and I think that that is the winning model, for
academia, for industry and for the future," he said.
In September, Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, an industry lobbying group known as PhRMA, said it
would create a site for companies to post the results of completed trials.
Then, under pressure from the editors of medical journals, the major drug
companies in January agreed to expand the number of trials registered on
clinicaltrials.gov, the N.I.H. site, which was originally created so
patients with life-threatening diseases could find out about clinical
trials.
But Merck, Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, three of
the six largest drug companies, have met the letter but not the spirit of
that agreement, Dr. Zarin said.
The three companies have filed only vague
descriptions of many studies, often failing even to name the drugs under
investigation, Dr. Zarin said. For example, Merck describes one trial as a
"one-year study of an investigational drug in obese patients."
Drug names are crucial, because the
clinicaltrials.gov registry is designed in part to prevent companies from
conducting several trials of a drug, then publicizing the trials with
positive results while hiding the negative ones. If the descriptions do not
include drug names, it is hard to tell how many times a drug has been
studied.
"If you're a systematic reviewer trying to
understand all the results for a particular drug, you might never know," Dr.
Zarin said. "You don't know whether you're seeing the one positive result
and not the four negative results - you don't have context."
Pfizer, Merck and GlaxoSmithKline say that they
disclose their largest trials, which determine whether a drug will be
approved. Though they would not discuss their policies in detail, executives
and press representatives at the companies said generally that disclosing
too much information about early-stage trials might reveal business or
scientific secrets.
Rick Koenig, a spokesman for Glaxo, said the
company understood the concerns about disclosure and planned to add more
information to clinicaltrials.gov. He declined to be more specific, saying
Glaxo and other companies were discussing the issue with regulators and
medical journal editors.
In contrast, Lilly has registered all but its
smallest trials at clinicaltrials.gov. Dr. Breier of Lilly said the company
believed that it could protect its intellectual property and still increase
the amount of information it released.
Lilly has also posted the results of many
completed studies to
clinicalstudyresults.org, the Web site
created last September by PhRMA. That site now contains some information on
nearly 80 drugs that are already on the market. Both Lilly and Glaxo have
posted detailed summaries of hundreds of studies.
Pfizer, on the other hand, has posted only a
few, and Merck has posted none.
All the companies were meeting the group's
guidelines for the site, said Dr. Alan Goldhammer, associate vice president
for regulatory affairs at PhRMA. The lobbying group requires only that its
members post a notice that a trial has been completed and a link to a
published study or a summary of an unpublished study, he said. Studies
completed before October 2002 are exempt from the requirements, and PhRMA
has not set penalties for companies that do not comply.
"We're seeing pretty regular posting on a weekly
basis, and as best we can assess right now, things are on track for meeting
the goal we and our members set for ourselves," Dr. Goldhammer said.
The continued gaps in disclosure have caused
some lawmakers to call for new federal laws. The bill introduced in February
by Mr. Dodd and Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, would
convert clinicaltrials.gov into a national registry for both new trials and
results and impose civil penalties of up to $10,000 a day for companies that
hide trial data. But Mr. Dodd said that the chances the bill would pass in
this Congress were even at best.
"I haven't had that pat on the back saying,
'This is a great idea, let's get going on this as fast as we can,' " Mr.
Dodd said.
Dr. David Fassler, a psychiatry professor at the
University of Vermont and a longtime proponent of more disclosure, said that
trial reporting had improved in the last two years. But he said that a
central federally run site, as opposed to the current mix of government and
industry efforts, was the only long-term solution.
ALEX BERENSON "Despite Vow, Drug Makers Still
Withhold Data," The New York Times, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/drgdta0531
Recalling When Flying Was an Elegant Affair
AS business travel picks up,
British Airways and
Virgin Atlantic have created advertising campaigns to promote their
business-class service to American executives.
Virgin Atlantic's $4.5 million campaign focuses
on the carrier's 16 daily flights out of its nine gateways in the United
States. Each flight has been given a name that evokes the romance and
elegance of travel in years past and is described on new Web sites - one for
each flight - and in ads in regional editions of national magazines.
British Airways' $15 million campaign, which
starts tomorrow, emphasizes its flight attendants' ability to anticipate a
customer's needs. The carrier offers some 40 daily flights out of 19
American cities. It is British Airways' first campaign created specifically
for the United States business travel market since the summer of 2000.
For both airlines, the stakes are high:
trans-Atlantic traffic originating in the United States generates 40 percent
of Virgin Atlantic's total revenue, while half of all United States revenue
comes from business-class passengers.
Almost two-thirds of British Airways' profit
comes from its trans-Atlantic flights, while business-class sales generate
about a third of its North American revenue. And business-class travel,
which weakened after the burst of the technology bubble and plummeted after
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, continues to strengthen. British Airways
said its business- and first-class traffic worldwide rose 1.7 percent in
March and 13.3 percent in April.
The timing of the two campaigns is significant:
Virgin Atlantic's advertising coincides with the final phasing in of its
improved "Upper Class," or business class, service. The airline began
offering this service in late 2003, and plans to make it available on all
trans-Atlantic flights by the end of the year. The service includes an
upgraded seat, meals, in-flight entertainment, and on-board spa and beauty
treatments.
Mike Powell, an airline analyst with Dresdner
Kleinwort Wasserstein in London, said British Airways' campaign was intended
in part to respond to Virgin Atlantic's effort to win a greater share of the
lucrative business travel market.
"British Airways is well aware of the fact that
it doesn't have the market-leading trans-Atlantic business-class product,"
he said. "It's trying to keep up with Virgin."
A British Airways spokeswoman said the carrier
was expected to announce plans next year "for new seats in business class."
It was British Airways that first introduced a business-class flat bed in
2000, an innovation that has been widely copied.
Both airlines' campaigns are also meant to
counter increased trans-Atlantic service by United States airlines, Mr.
Powell said. Domestic airlines will increase their trans-Atlantic capacity
by 7 percent summer, while European airlines will increase theirs by only 3
percent, according to Airline Business, a trade publication.
"British Airways and Virgin want to make sure
the additional capacity doesn't mean they lose premium market share," Mr.
Powell said. "They want to remind U.S. passengers there's a far better
product in the market" than that offered by American airlines, which he said
were "unable to invest in new aircraft and on-board products."
Virgin Atlantic's campaign, created by Crispin
Porter & Bogusky, is running in regional editions of magazines like Fortune,
Condé Nast Traveler and Newsweek. The agency designed a two-page,
black-and-white spread and boarding-card insert with flight details for 8 of
its 16 flights.
The concept of naming flights is meant to
restore the "romance and elegance" of an earlier era of travel, when flights
were also named, said Jeff Steinhour, a managing partner at Crispin Porter &
Bogusky. The service out of Washington, D.C., is called "the diplomat,"
while its daytime flight out of Newark is called "the wide-eye."
"We wanted to inject personality into individual
flights," Mr. Steinhour said.
To that end, the flights' Web sites show films
that describe each flight experience and provide details of meals and
entertainment offered on each.
The British Airways campaign, created by the New
York office of M&C Saatchi, with an online component by
agency.com,
a unit of the
Omnicom Group, is
running in magazines and on television, billboards and the Internet.
The TV ad - which will appear on the Golf
Channel, Bravo, Fox News and elsewhere - depicts a businessman reclining, in
his New York office, in a British Airways business-class seat. Invisible
hands give him a glass of champagne, canapés and a tissue to clean his
glasses when he starts to wipe them with his tie.
A magazine ad - running in publications like
Forbes, The New Yorker and The Economist - shows two limousine drivers in an
airport terminal, holding signs with the names of their arriving passengers
and standing next to a man clad in white. He is holding a white terry-cloth
robe and a sign with the name of a passenger - and is waiting to provide spa
services.
The tagline on all the ads is: "Business class
is different on British Airways."
With this advertising, the airline has gone
beyond promoting its business-class flat beds, the focus of all recent
campaigns geared to business travelers. Instead, the campaign stresses that
the airline anticipates "what our customers look for when they travel," said
Elizabeth Weisser, British Airways' vice president of marketing for North
America. "An enormous number of other carriers have come into the
marketplace with flat-bed-type products similar to ours, and as a result, it
was important for us to differentiate ourselves."
J. Grant Caplan, a corporate travel management
consultant based in Houston, said the campaigns represented the British
airlines' chance "to help defeat companies like US Airways that are on the
edge, or to help further weaken other carriers like United and American."
Mr. Caplan predicted American business travelers
could switch to either British Airways or Virgin if the airlines can shake
their interest in their frequent flier programs. It will be easier to
convert executives whose employers do not control their travel-buying
decisions as well as infrequent travelers, who are not as vested in loyalty
programs, he said.
JANE L. LEVERE, "Recalling When Flying Was an Elegant
Affair," The New York Times, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/fly0531
Up and Down on Tuition
Conventional wisdom has it that tuition rates
will go up every year at private colleges by a little more than the rate of
inflation. Some colleges struggling for enrollment will cut rates every now
and then, but the norm is a steady increase — but not too much in any one
year. This year, many leading private colleges are
announcing increases
in the 4-5 percent range.
Two private institutions this year, however,
have prepared for substantial changes in tuition policy for the next
academic year. The University of Richmond, which aspires to join the top
ranks for private colleges, is increasing total charges by 27 percent for
freshmen, to $40,510, effectively ending a longstanding policy of being
thousands of dollars less expensive than its competitors. (Current students
will face only a 5 percent increase and their base will be grandfathered
while they are students.) Roosevelt University, a Chicago institution that
serves many nontraditional students, is cutting tuition — and linking the
cut to how many courses a student takes, so that students have an incentive
to take more courses and to graduate sooner.
Data from the admissions and registration cycles
just completed suggest that both colleges are achieving some of the
financial and academic goals of their unconventional tuition policies.
Richmond has commitments from a comparably sized freshman class for the
fall, despite its huge tuition increase. And Roosevelt students have signed
up for more courses in the fall than in previous semesters. Officials at the
two colleges say that their experiences suggest the extent to which price
does and does not influence student choices.
Price Insensitivity at Richmond
William E. Cooper, the president at Richmond,
says he realizes that his university’s cost increase “superficially seems
outrageous.” But he said that he became convinced that Richmond “was about
$7,000 underpriced” and that the additional revenue would allow for more
financial aid and improvements in facilities and academic programs. “We
could dink around with this and ramp it up a little each year, but we
decided it was better to bite the bullet, to realign this and stay in place,
rather than looking confused.”
But what of student choices, and the widespread
public and political fear that high prices discourage students? With certain
student segments, that’s flat out false, Cooper says. Richmond found, he
said, that it was losing students to more expensive institutions and
enrolling students whose parents were willing to spend more than Richmond
was charging.
“We were leaving money on the table,” Cooper
says. “We had all these people with a kid at Dartmouth or a kid at Syracuse,
and a kid here, and we were the cheap school.”
Cooper also rejects the idea that a low price
can be a recruiting tool. He acknowledges that Richmond probably picked up a
few students over the years who might have been too wealthy to qualify for
financial aid at a Duke or Vanderbilt or Emory, but who were attracted by
the lower prices at Richmond. “The question is, are they going to be there
for us in the future” as alumni donors? Cooper says. “They are too finely
tuned to the financial,” he says.
The results of the first admissions cycle
suggest to Cooper that the tuition increase worked. Final numbers will shift
a bit as Richmond gains or loses a few students due to other colleges’ wait
list decisions. But right now, 770 students have paid deposits to enroll as
freshmen in the fall, the same number as last year. Applications were down
(to 5,779, from a record 6,236). So the admissions rate rose (to 47 percent
from 40 percent) and the yield — the percentage of admitted students who
enroll — was down a bit (to 28 percent from 31 percent). Minority
enrollments appear down slightly, to 12 percent from 13 percent.
But Cooper points out that measures of academic
quality didn’t change. Last year, the middle 50 percent of SAT scores was
1250-1390 and the average high school grade-point average was 3.52, and
figures from this year’s admitted class suggest that the figures will be
almost identical.
“There was bound to be a one-year shakeout,”
Cooper says of the drop in the number of applications, but the class
entering is not only as smart as the previous class, but appears to have
many families that can afford Richmond’s new rates and want to pay them.
“One of the strong philosophical bents of this
change was the price insensitivity of people who really care about higher
education,” Cooper says. “Just like people buy the best cappuccino maker if
they really care, so with higher education. If you really care, a couple
thousand bucks isn’t in the decision maker and that’s the student and family
we want.”
Price and Graduation Rates at Roosevelt
At Roosevelt, the students aren’t necessarily
buying a lot of cappuccino makers. And enrollments have been healthy for the
institution, at about 7,500 head count, with 60 percent of students as
undergraduates, many of them working adults.
Mary E. Hendry, vice president for enrollment
and student services, says that the university’s problem is with graduation
rates. Currently only about 40 percent of students graduate within six
years, and the university would like to raise that proportion to 50 percent.
Hendry says that it is better for students and
the university if they move through the academic programs at a brisker pace.
“We decided to use tuition to encourage them to take more so they would
graduate within four years,” she says.
Historically, Roosevelt has charged tuition on a
per-credit basis, and for next year, the per-credit figure will go up 7.3
percent, to $755. But the university is setting special fees to discourage
students from taking almost enough courses to graduate on time, and to
encourage them to instead take enough to earn their degrees.
Students taking 12 credits a semester will be
charged at a rate that would equal $14,180 for a year, an increase of 10.2
percent over last year’s per-credit rate. But those who take 15 credits will
be charged the exact same amount for a year of courses, a decrease of 11.8
percent in what students would have paid last year. (Students who take 16
credits will pay a little more, but will also be paying 11.8 percent than in
previous years.)
Typically, students register for about 30,000
credit hours in a semester at Roosevelt. For the fall, the first semester
under the new plan, it appears that there will be an increase of 1,000
credit hours — while enrollment is holding steady.
“I think this shows that we are reaching
students,” says Hendry. “We can use these policies to change graduation
rates over the long run.”
Scott Jaschik "Up
and Down on Tuition," Inside Higher Ed, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/tuition0531
Arthur Andersen conviction overturned
The Supreme Court on
Tuesday overturned the conviction of the Arthur Andersen accounting firm for
destroying Enron Corp.-related documents before the energy giant's collapse.
In a unanimous opinion, justices said the former
Big Five accounting firm's June 2002 conviction was improper.
The court said the jury instructions at trial
were too vague and broad for jurors to determine correctly whether Andersen
obstructed justice.
"The jury instructions here were flawed in
important respects," Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist wrote for the court.
The ruling is a setback for the Bush
administration, which made prosecution of white-collar criminals a high
priority following accounting scandals at major corporations.
After Enron's 2001 collapse, the Justice
Department went after Andersen first.
Enron crashed in December 2001, putting more
than 5,000 employees out of work, just six weeks after the energy company
revealed massive losses and writedowns.
Subsequently, as the Securities and Exchange
Commission began looking into Enron's convoluted finances, Andersen put in
practice a policy calling for destroying unneeded documentation.
Government attorneys argued that Andersen should
be held responsible for instructing its employees to "undertake an
unprecedented campaign of document destruction."
"Arthur Andersen conviction overturned,"
Tuesday, May 31, 2005 Posted: 10:28 AM EDT (1428
GMT) , CNN.com,
http://snipurl.com/aa0531
Photo from playboy-themed party grabs
alumni's attention
Photo From Playboy-Themed Party Grabs Alumni's
Attention Female High School Seniors Show Up Wearing Skimpy Lingerie
HOUSTON -- A racy photo from a high
school party with a Playboy theme has sent alumni of the school into shock,
Houston television station KPRC reported.
Some Memorial High School alumni told the
station the so-called "Playboy Party" went too far, saying the theme was too
hot for teens. However, students who attended the party disagree, saying it
was all clean fun.
"It doesn't put off the best impression. It
doesn't make me want my kids to go there," 1994 Memorial High graduate Sabra
Boone said.
Boon said senior men throw a theme party that is
not sanctioned by the school. This year's theme was the Playboy mansion.
Parents are upset after a Playboy-themed party
that had girls dressing in revealing outfits.
While one student, who asked not to be
identified, told the station a dress code for the party was not established,
some of the girls showed up in skimpy lingerie.
Boone, along with other alumni, said she
received a picture from the party in an e-mail.
"Everyone is shocked," Boone said.
One parent, whose son attended the party, told
the station the senior boys tried hard to throw a fun, safe party,
explaining it was held at a private venue with chaperones and police.
Attendees were required to sign waivers promising not to drink alcohol.
Boone said girls wore formals to a similar party
she attended during her senior year. She told the station she is
disappointed in Memorial High School's 2005 senior class.
"Regardless, the girls are hardly wearing any
clothes. I just couldn't believe their parents would let them out of the
house like that," Boone said.
by
tuffydoodle "Photo
from playboy-themed party grabs alumni's attention,"
Free Republic, May 24, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/grdprty0531
'Deep Throat' Is Identified
Magazine Article Identifies Watergate Source
After more than 30 years of silence, the most
famous anonymous source in American history, Deep Throat, has identified
himself to a reporter at Vanity Fair.
W. Mark Felt, 91, an assistant director at the
FBI in the 1970s, has told reporter John D. O'Connor that he is "the man
known as Deep Throat."
O'Connor told ABC News in an interview today
that Felt had for years thought he was a dishonorable man for talking to Bob
Woodward, a reporter for The Washington Post during Watergate. Woodward's
coverage of the scandal, written with Carl Bernstein, led to the resignation
of President Nixon.
"Mark wants the public respect, and wants to be
known as a good man," O'Connor said. "He's very proud of the bureau, he's
very proud of the FBI. He now knows he is a hero."
The identity of Deep Throat, the source for
details about Nixon's Watergate cover-up, has been called the best-kept
secret in the history of Washington D.C., or at least in the history of
politics and journalism. Only four people were said to know the source's
identity: Woodward; Bernstein; Ben Bradlee, the former executive editor of
the Post; and, of course, Deep Throat himself.
Both Bradlee and Bernstein have refused to
confirm to ABC News that Felt is Deep Throat.
Woodward would also neither confirm nor deny the
report.
"There's a principle involved here," he told ABC
News. He and Bernstein promised not to reveal Deep Throat's identity until
the source dies.
Despite years of feelings of negativity and
ambivalence, O'Connor said, Felt's family has helped him realize that "he is
a hero" and "that it is good what he did."
In his 1979 book, "The FBI Pyramid: From the
Inside," Felt flat-out denied that he was the famous source.
"I would have done better," Felt told The
Hartford Courant in 1999. "I would have been more effective. Deep Throat
didn't exactly bring the White House crashing down, did he?"
Best-Kept Secret
Throughout the years, politicians and
journalists have guessed at Deep Throat's identity.
Contenders included Gen. Al Haig, who was a
popular choice for a long time, especially when he was running for president
in 1988. Haig was Nixon's chief of staff and secretary of state under
President Reagan.
Woodward finally said publicly that Haig was not
Deep Throat. Other contenders mentioned frequently, besides Felt, included
Henry Kissinger; CIA officials Cord Meyer and William E. Colby; and FBI
officials L. Patrick Gray, Charles W. Bates and Robert Kunkel.
In "All the President's Men," the 1974 movie of
the Watergate scandal, Woodward and Bernstein described their source as
holding an extremely sensitive position in the executive branch.
The source was dubbed "Deep Throat" by Post
managing editor Howard Simons after the notorious porn film.
Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures, "'Deep Throat' Is
Identified," ABC News, May 31, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/DT0531
TIDBITS JUNE 1, 2005
Andersen Decision Is
Bittersweet For Ex-Workers
When former Arthur Andersen LLP
senior manager Bill Strathmann heard that the Supreme Court had overturned
Andersen's criminal conviction yesterday, he immediately relayed the news to
his wife, father, brother and friends. On an email chain including 17 former
Andersen partners and employees from Andersen's old Tysons Corner, Va.,
office, terms like "three years too late," "vindication" and "unbelievable"
were sprinkled throughout.
While the damage has been done,
Mr. Strathmann, now chief executive of a nonprofit organization, said, "this
decision is still good for the legacy of Arthur Andersen."
In chat rooms, Web logs and emails
yesterday, many former employees voiced similar opinions about the Supreme
Court's unanimous decision to overturn the 2002 criminal conviction of
Andersen tied to its botched audits of Enron Corp. The court ruled that
jurors used too loose a standard of culpability against the once-venerable
accounting firm. Still, the Supreme Court's decision isn't likely to revive
Arthur Andersen -- or help former partners pull out their remaining capital
any time soon.
The firm lost its license to
practice in Texas and some other states shortly after its June 2002
conviction, and by the fall of 2002 had surrendered the rest of its
licenses. Today, Andersen has fewer than 200 employees, down from 85,000
world-wide before its fall. Most work to wrap up lawsuits pending against
the firm.
The accounting debacles at Enron
and WorldCom Inc., another Andersen client, have permanently etched a
negative perception of the firm in many people's minds. Among the most vivid
images: Workers in Andersen's Houston office shredding tons of documents
connected to long-valuable client Enron; or, months later, the news of
WorldCom's collapse into bankruptcy from an $11 billion accounting fraud,
the nation's largest.
Still, the decision marks a win to
some former employees. In her Web log, Mary Trigiani, a communications
consultant in San Francisco who previously wrote speeches for Andersen
executives, typed yesterday: "This is an enormous vindication of the
majority of the people who embodied the vision and values of the venerable
organization -- but not of the few managers who enabled Andersen's
destruction."
In some ways, "a stigma has been
lifted," said Marc Andersen, a former Andersen partner who organized a
1,000-person rally in Washington in 2002 to protest the Justice Department
indictment.
For many, the ruling is
bittersweet. Douglas J. DeRito, a former partner in Andersen's Atlanta
office, saw his career derailed. He had invested $500,000 in the firm, where
he worked for eight years, to buy his partnership stake. "I've been through
over two years of hell," said Mr. DeRito, now an executive director with a
small Atlanta firm. "We Andersen partners worked a significant amount of our
professional careers to get to the level of partner," and then "the Justice
Department took the carpet out from under us." Andersen had about 1,700
partners in the U.S., some of whom had invested as much as $3 million.
Because of a mountain of
litigation for the blowups at Enron and WorldCom, the pickings remain slim
for ex-partners. A stipulation in a recent $65 million settlement with
investors of WorldCom (now MCI Inc.) provides that the plaintiffs will
receive 20% of any money remaining in Andersen's coffers after other cases
are settled. The Supreme Court's decision seemingly does little to improve
Andersen's standing in cases where the firm is being sued for negligent
audit work.
"Clearly the firm failed," said
Barry Melancon, president of the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief on behalf of Andersen.
The vindication is only that "the firm as a whole is not guilty in this
situation."
DIYA GULLAPALLI, "Andersen
Decision Is Bittersweet For Ex-Workers," The Wall Street
Journal,
June 1, 2005; Page A6,
http://snipurl.com/aa20601
A New Low Price For Broadband
SBC to Offer High-Speed
Internet Service for $14.95 a Month; Rivals Face Pressure to Follow
In an aggressive move
to cut the cost of high-speed Internet access, the nation's second-largest
phone company plans to start charging $14.95 a month for new customers --
making broadband service less expensive than some dial-up plans.
The move by
SBC Communications
Inc., announced today, may compel competitors to follow suit. Cable
companies currently dominate the high-speed business, but typically charge
considerably more for the service, often $40 or more a month. The basic
broadband plan at cable giant
Comcast Corp. for
instance, is $42.95. Traditionally, cable companies justify those prices by
the fact that their connections are among the fastest available -- as much
as triple the speed of a high-speed connection provided by a phone company
like SBC. (Even the slowest broadband connection is roughly 25 times as fast
as dial-up.)
Analysts say SBC's move marks the
first time broadband service has been broadly offered at a significantly
less expensive rate than AOL's dial-up service. More than half of the 77
million U.S. households with Internet access still use dial-up connections,
such as
Time Warner Inc.'s
AOL, which charges $23.90 per month.
The SBC price cut comes as the
telecom industry is confronting sharply increased competition from cable-TV
companies and Internet start-ups. In addition, fast-changing technologies,
such as inexpensive Internet-based telephone services, are undercutting
their traditional phone business. Telcom companies have also seen a sharp
decline of their traditional local-phone business, as customers have begun
using cellphones and email. The industry has responded so far by
consolidating, triggering $150 billion of mergers and acquisitions in the
past 18 months.
Cable companies officials said
yesterday that they don't need to respond to price cuts by the phone
companies because they say cable broadband service is faster and more
efficient than telephone broadband service. "If price were the only thing
that mattered to everyone, we'd all be driving Yugos," says a spokesman for
Cox Communications
Inc., the country's third-largest cable operator. (DSL service is basically
a souped-up phone line, whereas cable broadband is transmitted over the
cable-TV network, which has higher capacity than copper phone lines.)
But some analysts say the cable
industry may soon be forced to respond. "As broadband reaches deeper into
the mass market, the service needs to appeal to more price-sensitive
customers," says Craig Moffett, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
SBC's offer is open to subscribers
of the company's local phone service in its 13-state service area, which
includes California, Texas and Connecticut. To be eligible, customers must
sign up for the plan online at www.sbc.com. SBC was already offering some of
the lowest cost broadband service available among large cable and telephone
companies, at $19.95 a month.
With its price cut, SBC is
essentially in a land-grab mode, leaving the company more concerned with
adding customers than increasing broadband profitability. SBC declines to
say whether its broadband operations are profitable.
The company is seeking to broaden
its base of 5.6 million subscribers to its high-speed service, known as
digital subscriber line, or DSL. Signing up for DSL doesn't require that a
customer have a second phone line. However, in most cases it does require
users to have at least one phone-line subscription.
SBC's $14.95 offer isn't a
temporary promotion, the company says. Frequently, rivals have offered
similarly low prices, but mainly as temporary promotions that expired after
a period of time.
Special Promotions
There are 34.5 million broadband
subscribers nationwide, a figure that analysts expect will nearly double in
the next four years.
The telecom companies have
steadily lowered prices on broadband service in the past two years,
sometimes through special promotions, in hopes of catching up to cable
providers, which were the first to offer broadband and maintain a
substantial edge over DSL providers. Currently, there are more than 21.1
million cable-broadband subscribers, compared with about roughly 15 million
DSL subscribers, though estimates vary.
The phone companies' tactic seems
to be working. In the first quarter of this year, of the 2.6 million new
broadband subscribers, 192,655 more turned to DSL over cable, according to
Leichtman Research Group Inc., a media-markets research firm based in
Durham, N.C.
Television and Gaming
Broadband is all the more
important for phone companies such as SBC because new services that they are
beginning to offer, such as television and gaming, are increasingly going to
run over the companies' broadband networks. The more broadband customers
phone companies have, the more additional services they can sell to them
down the road, the logic goes. For instance, SBC is getting into the TV
business in direct competition with cable companies. Phone companies without
large numbers of broadband subscribers could find themselves without a
sizable market for new products and services.
"We're trying to expand the market
for broadband as much as we can," says Ed Cholerton, an SBC vice president
of consumer marketing for broadband.
DIONNE SEARCEY, "A
New Low Price For Broadband," The Wall Street Journal,
June 1, 2005; Page D1,
http://snipurl.com/brdbnd0601
The New Post 9/11 Graduates -- Standing up
for Patriotism
Memorial Day has several different meanings for
Americans. For some, we were spending a weekend reflecting, reminiscing and
reminding ourselves about the sacrifices our family members, neighbors, and
fellow Americans made as soldiers for our nation. At the same time, many of
us were also focusing our attention on our children, nieces, nephews and for
many, our grandchildren who are preparing themselves to take the final walk
across their high school or college graduation stage.
One of the questions these new graduates have to
be pondering has to be "what nation and world are we graduating into"? For
young people it has to be fraught with some sense of peril. These post 9/11
graduates are inheriting a nation that lived through the most vicious attack
on our nation since that horrible day of December 7th, 1941, when Pearl
Harbor was bombed without warning and without provocation.
This horrible event from so long ago can
certainly be a guide for the young graduates of today. I point purposely to
this past Memorial Day weekend, because it is at this time that families
typically gather around and share some very special moments with parents,
grandparents and a host of family and friends who pour through the family
photos to point out perhaps their now aged warriors of World War II. Perhaps
they point to an uncle or grandparent who did not return home to his native
soil and now lies buried in a U.S. cemetery on foreign soil
Perhaps, the family visited their local cemetery
where their father or uncle or even aunt or grandmother now lies buried, a
former soldier who served, who fought, and who sacrificed for their nation,
because it was the right thing to do...because it was the American thing to
do.
Perhaps they visited a hospital with the soon to
be graduate and sat on the side of the bed with an aging grandparent or
father who was a soldier in the fox hole or perhaps a pilot or a tail gunner
in one of the flying fortresses from the Second World War. The parent's son
or daughter may have sat quietly and listened to stories spun from long
buried memories of acts of bravery, mixed with a little bit of fear, but a
whole lot of courage. Maybe the young adult son stood up and just as he was
getting ready to leave his hospital room, he turned and saluted his
grandfather, and thanked him for his gift to our nation, to his community
and to his family.
Your daughter may have asked the question at the
backyard barbeque on Memorial Day, "What about women? " as she passed the
photos of the women in the family who also sacrificed during those
tumultuous war years. What did Grandmother Christina or Aunt Cynthia do when
they were a Wave or a WAC during World War II? In listening she probably
learned that perhaps the times her grandmother grew up in were not much
different from the times now as she is about to step across the graduation.
These young high school and college graduates
also remember hearing an American President make a steely firm declaration
about dealing with those who were responsible for bringing terror to our
home shores. They saw a determined President Bush seem to echo the words
from another generation...and spoken by another American President. The
emotions of patriotism ran high then on December 8, 1941, as President
Franklin D. Roosevelt said to a joint Session of Congress:
"Yesterday, December 7th, 1941 -- a date which
will live in infamy -- the United States of America was suddenly and
deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.
Japan has, therefore, undertaken a surprise
offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. The facts of yesterday and
today speak for themselves. The people of the United States have already
formed their opinions and well understand the implications to the very life
and safety of our nation.
No matter how long it may take us to overcome
this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might
will win through to absolute victory.
I believe that I interpret the will of the
Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend
ourselves to the uttermost, but will make it very certain that this form of
treachery shall never again endanger us."
Those graduates of 1945 heard those words and
many by the tens of thousands left high school or college and answered the
call to make those who attacked America pay for their treachery.
Sixty years later, the soon to be graduates are
remembering the fateful remarks from President Bush as he too addressed the
American public and comforted and rallied a nation that was also the victim
of an air attack.
President Bush as President Roosevelt before him
also addressed the nation, " Good evening. Today, our fellow citizens, our
way of life, our very freedom came under attack in a series of deliberate
and deadly terrorist acts. The victims were in airplanes, or in their
offices; secretaries, businessmen and women, military and federal workers;
moms and dads, friends and neighbors. Thousands of lives were suddenly ended
by evil, despicable acts of terror.
A great people has been moved to defend a great
nation. Terrorist attacks can shake the foundations of our biggest
buildings, but they cannot touch the foundation of America. These acts
shattered steel, but they cannot dent the steel of American resolve.
Some of our greatest moments have been acts of
courage for which no one could have ever prepared.
We cannot know every turn this battle will take.
Yet we know our cause is just and our ultimate victory is assured. We will,
no doubt, face new challenges. But we have our marching orders: My fellow
Americans, let's roll. "
So you see, the young people in America from two
different generations share a common thread. That is the common thread of
freedom and of patriotism. These young people who you may have thought were
not listening or paying attention to you as you pored through those photo
albums and pointed out the family members in uniform who smiled back through
the ages at you... were listening
These young graduates are, according to a recent
CBS report, ditching over three decades of "Me'ism" and sensing a true
obligation to give something back to their nation. So this post 9/11
generation is listening to the clarion call beating loudly within their own
heart for helping their nation.
These young people are pausing to examine what
exactly their obligation is to improving, to bettering, to protecting and to
standing up for advancing our nation, and that is honorable and commendable.
They are not doing what others have done
before...holding their hand outstretched and asking..."How much are you
going to pay me first."
Hopefully those narrow self-absorbed
Neanderthals are dying off in America. You know the ones, and hopefully you
didn't raise one. These are the selfish non-patriots...who merely turn their
head and leave the seriousness of defending the nation and making the world
free for Democracy to "those patsies and saps" because it is after
all...someone else's' job.
But that's fine, because like Revolutionary War
hero Samuel Adams said: "If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the
tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest for freedom, go
home and leave us in peace. We seek not your council nor your arms. Crouch
down and lick the hand that feeds you, and may posterity forget that ye were
our countrymen."
Patriotism is making a comeback with the
post-9/11 graduates and they like their grandparents before them may truly
become the next Greatest Generation.
Kevin Fobbs, "The
New Post 9/11 Graduates -- Standing up for Patriotism,"
Free Republic, June 1, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/grads0601
Can Rev. Al be Limbaugh's air apparent?
Could there be any odder couple than Rush Limbaugh
and Al Sharpton? Not if I have anything to do with it.
Last week - after Matrix Media announced a deal
for Sharpton to host a "Limbaugh of the Left"-type talk radio show - the
conservative radio star said he'll think about mentoring the minister in the
finer points of the medium.
Yesterday, Sharpton contacted me to say he's
eager to accept the sort-of offer to (as Limbaugh put it on his own show
Friday) "let [Sharpton] guest-host the program for, like, 30 minutes at a
time while I am sitting here critiquing him."
Sharpton told me: "I was a little surprised, but
I'm willing to take him up on his speculative offer. I think it would be
interesting. It would be something that both of us can learn from. He can
learn some of the thoughts of the left, and I can learn some of the
techniques of the right. Let's see if he's serious."
(Excerpt) Read more at
nydailynews.com ...
Pikamax, "Can
Rev. Al be Limbaugh's air apparent?," Free
Republic, 06/01/2005,
http://snipurl.com/rlal0601
[The article below reads just like
"Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand---Debbie]
Dairy gets squeezed by the feds
In its 85 years of existence, Smith Brothers Dairy
in Kent has survived all manner of misfortune and mistakes.
There was the Depression, when milk sales
plummeted. There were cow-killing floods. There were modern times, when it
appeared the old-fashioned idea of fresh milk delivered to the doorstep had
died.
And there was the crackdown when society
realized cow manure could be as toxic to fish as anything produced at a
nuclear plant.
"None of that compares to this," says Alexis
Smith Koester, 60, dairy president and granddaughter of the founder, Ben
Smith. "This is the biggest threat we've ever faced."
She's talking about the federal government.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has proposed
new rules that could force Smith Brothers to either give up half its
business or close up shop entirely, Koester says.
What are the feds trying to stop? They're trying
to keep Smith Brothers Dairy from selling its milk for less.
And we call this a capitalist country.
The dairy, which is small enough that the
president answered the phone when I called, is being punished for doing too
much too well.
For 75 years, milk has been heavily regulated by
price and marketing controls.
People who know more about it than I do say the
system works well. It protects those who own only one part of the milk
business — say, a farmer with cows but no milk-processing plant — from being
gouged by big agribusinesses.
But Smith Brothers has always been exempt from
these regulations because it is so independent. It does it all. It is one of
only 11 dairies left in the Northwest that raise and milk the cows as well
as pasteurize and bottle the milk.
Its business model is so antiquated that most
dairies like it long since went under.
Smith Brothers survived by discovering that what
was old is new again. Home delivery of milk is hot. Especially if people
know who owns the cows so there's a guarantee no growth hormones were used.
Remarkably, Smith Brothers now delivers milk to
40,000 homes in and around Seattle, the most in its history. And it is so
efficient it does so at the same or lower prices you get in many stores.
Yet the feds, backed by the biggest dairy
processors in the West, want to force Smith Brothers and other
do-it-yourself dairies to sell through the government-regulated system. They
say this will help the small farmers who already sell milk to big
processors.
But Smith Brothers, no milk monopoly with just 1
percent of the market, would have to pay subsidies to its competitors that
exceed the dairy's yearly profit. Or it would have to break up its business,
and no longer provide its unique cow-to-carton-to-doorstep service.
So what we have is the government, prodded by
large corporations, saying it is helping small family farms by destroying
one of our most successful small family farms.
Come to think of it, I guess that is
American-style capitalism after all.
Danny Westneat, "Dairy
gets squeezed by the feds," Free Republic (from The Seattle
Times), June 3, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/dairy0601
BMG Cracks Piracy Whip
NEW YORK -- As part
of its mounting U.S. rollout of content-enhanced and copy-protected CDs,
Sony BMG Music Entertainment is testing technology solutions that bar
consumers from making additional copies of burned CD-R discs.
Since March the company has released at least 10
commercial titles -- more than 1 million discs in total -- featuring
technology from U.K. anti-piracy specialist First4Internet that allows
consumers to make limited copies of protected discs, but blocks users from
making copies of the copies.
The concept is known as "sterile burning." And
in the eyes of Sony BMG executives, the initiative is central to the
industry's efforts to curb casual CD burning.
"The casual piracy, the school yard piracy, is a
huge issue for us," says Thomas Hesse, president of global digital business
for Sony BMG. "Two-thirds of all piracy comes from ripping and burning CDs,
which is why making the CD a secure format is of the utmost importance."
Names of specific titles carrying the technology
were not disclosed. The effort is not specific to First4Internet. Other Sony
BMG partners are expected to begin commercial trials of sterile burning
within the next month.
To date, most copy protection and other digital
rights management-based solutions that allow for burning have not included
secure burning.
Early copy-protected discs as well as all
Digital Rights Management-protected files sold through online retailers like
iTunes, Napster and others offer burning of tracks into unprotected WAV
files. Those burned CDs can then be ripped back onto a personal computer
minus a DRM wrapper and converted into MP3 files.
Under the new solution, tracks ripped and burned
from a copy-protected disc are copied to a blank CD in Microsoft's Windows
Media Audio format. The DRM embedded on the discs bars the burned CD from
being copied.
"The secure burning solution is the sensible way
forward," First4Internet CEO Mathew Gilliat-Smith says. "Most consumers
accept that making a copy for personal use is really what they want it for.
The industry is keen to make sure that is not abused by making copies for
other people that would otherwise go buy a CD."
As with other copy-protected discs, albums
featuring XCP, or extended copy protection, will allow for three copies to
be made.
However, Sony BMG has said it is not locked into
the number of copies. The label is looking to offer consumers a fair-use
replication of rights enjoyed on existing CDs.
A key concern with copy-protection efforts
remains compatibility.
It is a sticking point at Sony BMG and other
labels as they look to increase the number of copy-protected CDs they push
into the market.
Among the biggest headaches: Secure burning
means that iPod users do not have any means of transferring tracks to their
device, because Apple Computer has yet to license its FairPlay DRM for use
on copy-protected discs.
As for more basic CD player compatibility
issues, Gilliat-Smith says the discs are compliant with Sony Philips CD
specifications and should therefore play in all conventional CD players.
The moves with First4Internet are part of a
larger copy-protection push by Sony BMG that also includes SunnComm and its
MediaMax technology.
To date, SunnComm has been the music giant's
primary partner on commercial releases -- including Velvet Revolver's
Contraband and Anthony Hamilton's solo album. In all, more
than 5.5 million content-enhanced and protected discs have been shipped
featuring SunnComm technology.
First4Internet's XCP has been used previously on
prerelease CDs only. Sony BMG is the first to commercially deploy XCP.
First4Internet's other clients -- which include
Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and EMI -- are using XCP for
prerelease material.
Sony BMG expects that by year's end a
substantial number of its U.S. releases will employ either MediaMax or XCP.
All copy-protected solutions will include such extras as photo galleries,
enhanced liner notes and links to other features.
Reuters, "BMG Cracks Piracy Whip,"
Wired News, 03:00 PM May. 31, 2005 PT,
http://snipurl.com/bmg0601
Taking a Load Off While You Drive
As you pack your bags to hit the road this
weekend, don't forget the swimsuit, sun block and driving directions. And
hit the loo before you buckle up because record numbers of Americans will be
right there with you heading out on vacation. Or you could do as some Brits
do and pack a portable toilet to use in the car.
Two British engineers have invented the Indipod,
an inflatable in-car toilet powered by a cigarette lighter. After plugging
into the car's lighter, the bubble toilet or "private sanitary sanctuary"
inflates to an area about 4 feet high and 3 feet wide and is sufficient to
accommodate two people. When not in use, the portable toilet folds away into
a bag the size of a suitcase and weighs 22 pounds.
"We are on the road a lot and built one for
ourselves and actually used it as we were developing it," said James
Shippen, inventor and co-founder of the Indipod. Their 15 prototypes led to
the masterpiece, which works best in SUVs or minivans.
End to Long Bathroom Queues
Launched last November in Britain, the
toilet-on-the-go is available online for $376, not including shipping.
"Originally in the United States, we sold these
for people with medical conditions like Chron's disease," Shippen said, "but
a lot of families are inquiring about them now."
Chron's disease is a progressive, inflammatory
disease of the bowel. The most common symptoms are diarrhea and pain, which
means unpredictable and frequent pit stops.
But getting to a satisfactory pit stop on the
road can be a trying experience for anyone. Hygiene in run-down, badly lit
truck stops leaves a lot to be desired along the nation's busy highways.
Most women's facilities have endless lines and the smelly stalls have most
people gasping for fresh air as they zip up.
So if you are on the go this summer, the Indipod
Web site claims there's no need to twist yourself in knots counting down the
miles before finding relief, "the Indipod will keep you on course."
Don't Let Your Bladder Do the Driving
With Memorial Day marking the unofficial start
of the summer driving season, motorists may be complaining about rising
prices at the pump but it's not keeping them home. AAA estimates that
approximately 31.1 million travelers (84 percent of all holiday travelers)
expect to travel by motor vehicle this weekend, a 2.2 percent increase from
the 30.5 million who drove a year ago.
Overall, 37.2 million Americans will travel 50
miles or more from home this holiday, a slight increase from a year ago.
Shippen hopes to find some new customers among these driving droves.
"There's usually a giggle factor
when people hear about our loo but often those same people become our
customers saying, 'I could use one of those,' " said Shippen, remarking on
the numerous "dirty" jokes he's gotten about the toilet-on-the-go.
The unit doesn't come with a seat belt so
Shippen advises hitting the brakes and parking before you "unload." In 30
seconds, your loo's hygiene bubble inflates and you climb in. The others in
the car cannot see you.
An air fan supposedly keeps bathroom noises and
odors sealed in but air fresheners may also be a good investment. If the
long road beckons and you want to stay on course, the Indipod can handle
eight visitors in one day or one person for eight days or two people for
four days.
Road-Tested and Approved
Shippen and co-founder Barbara May road tested
their invention themselves recently by driving across Europe from north to
south.
"We traveled 2,200 miles in just over a week and
never left the car at all," he said.
Food and their trusty toilet got them from
Scotland to the boot of Italy. They stopped at gas stations to fill up their
tank and at campsites to "de-fuel" their Indipod.
The duo plans to test their car "port-a-pottie"
in the wide expanse of the United States this year by driving cross-country
from New York to San Diego.
Their car port-a-pottie will certainly get lots
of use, although it may discourage any notion of car-pooling. And before
hitting the road with the Indipod, there is one more critical item to
remember to take along -- toilet paper.
CHARLOTTE SECTOR, "Taking a Load Off While You Drive,"
ABC News (Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures),
May. 27, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/load0601
Forwarded by a guy who's old enough for this cruise
Boy have I got the best investment for you!! Just read on.
About 2 years ago my wife and I were on a cruise through the western
Mediterranean aboard a Princess liner. At dinner we noticed an elderly lady
sitting alone along the rail of the grand stairway in the main dining room.
I also noticed that all the staff, ships officers, waiters, busboys, etc.,
all seemed very familiar with this lady. I asked our waiter who the lady
was, expecting to be told she owned the line, but he said he only knew that
she had been on board for the last four cruises, back to back As we left the
dining room one evening I caught her eye and stopped to say hello. We
chatted and I said, "I understand you've been on this ; ship for the last
four cruises". She replied, "Yes, that's true." I stated, "I don't
understand" and she replied, without a pause, "It's cheaper than a nursing
home". So, there will be no nursing home in my future. When I get old and
feeble, I am going to get on a Princess Cruise Ship. The average cost for a
nursing home is $200 per day. I have checked on reservations at Princess and
I can get a long term discount and senior discount price of $135 per day.
That leaves $65 a day for: 1. Gratuities which will only be $10 per day. 2.
I will have as many as 10 meals a day if I can waddle to the restaurant, or
I can have room service (which means I can have breakfast in bed every day
of the week).
3. Princess has as many as three swimming pools, a workout room, free
washers and dryers, and shows every night. 4. They have free toothpaste and
razors, and free soap and shampoo. 5. They will even treat you like a
customer, not a patient. An extra $5 worth of tips will have the entire
staff scrambling to help you. 6. I will get to meet new people every 7 or 14
days. 7. T.V. broken? Light bulb need changing? Need to have the mattress
replaced? No Problem! They will fix everything and apologize for your
inconvenience. 8. Clean sheets and towels every day, and you don't even have
to ask for them. 9. If you fall in the nursing home and break a hip you are
on Medicare; if you fall and break a hip on the Princess ship they will
upgrade you to a suite for the rest of your life. Now hold on for the best!
Do you want to see South America, the Panama Canal, Tahiti, Australia, New
Zealand, A sia, or name where you want to go? Princess will have a ship
ready to go. So don't look for me in a nursing home, just call shore to
ship.
PS And don't forget, when you die, they just dump you over the side at no
charge.
Music: Daddy's Hands
---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/hands.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
What to know and do when you suspect fraud ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/wells.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud reporting ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
Women with big butts may live longer
Curvy women are more likely to live longer than
their slimmer counterparts, researchers have found. Institute of
Preventative Medicine in Copenhagen researchers found those with wider hips
also appeared to be protected against heart conditions. Women with a hip
measurement smaller than 40 inches, or a size 14 would not have this
protection, they said.
"Curvier women 'will live longer'," BBC News, June 3, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4606011.stm
Warning to Internet Shoppers: Toss Your Cookies
Internet shoppers who want the best prices should
delete cookies as often as possible. That's because the less online
merchants know about you, the less likely they'll be able to figure out how
much you're willing to pay. According to a recent study by the University of
Pennsylvania, most consumers don't know that online retailers will charge
different prices to different people for the same product. Merchants call it
"price customization." I call it "get it anyway you can." See the
story at
http://update.internetweek.com/cgi-bin4/DM/y/hoLC0GMPWZ0G4X0DRXQ0EK
Diabetic Blood Testing: Relief From Pin-Pricking May Be
at Hand
Ron Nagar and Benny Pesach, the founders of Glucon,
Inc., have created a watch-like device that reads blood glucose levels
without the need to stick, poke, or prick the skin. Based on photo-acoustics
research first done at Tel Aviv University in Israel, their device uses
lasers, ultrasound, and advanced software algorithms to get a reading that
is as efficient and accurate as pin-prick tests. And, says Glucon's CEO, Dan
Goldberger, it won't be any more costly than testing kits, which today
average between $1,500 and $2,000 per year for a patient.
Sam Jaffe, "Relief From Pin-Pricking May Be at Hand," MIT's Technology
Review, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/wo/wo_060205jaffe.asp
Also see
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/wo/wo_060205jaffe.asp?trk=nl
Tiny tots are surfing the Web before learning to read
Before they can even read, almost one in four
children in nursery school is learning a skill that even some adults have
yet to master: using the internet. Twenty-three percent of children in
nursery school -- kids age 3, 4 or 5 -- have gone online, according to the
Education Department. By kindergarten, 32 percent have used the internet,
typically under adult supervision.
"Pre-Schoolers Play Online," Wired News, June 4, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67746,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_8
Over a third of U.S. families are not putting enough funds aside to
educate their children
Retirement Reality Check, survey of 1,604 people with household incomes
of $35,000 or more, Allstate Insurance Company, Northbrook, Ill.,
www.allstate.com ,
2005.
Stem cells from fetuses can repair cardiac damage
The Institute of Regenerative Medicine in Barbados
is convinced that stem cells from fetuses can repair cardiac damage
"A Boost for Broken Hearts?" Business Week, June 13, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_24/b3937009_mz001.htm
The porn princess wins a calculated gamble for $1,000,000,000
In 1998 a California porn princess commissioned a
25-year-old Indian computer wiz to write a piece of software. Trained as a
lawyer, Ruth Parasol had made a small fortune in online pornography after
starting, according to legend, with a couple of sex phone lines given to her
by her father as an unorthodox teenage birthday present. She had sold all
her porn interests and it was time to invest the proceeds. Online gambling
was the new buzz and she found a friend of a friend, Anurag Dikshit, a
computer engineering graduate from the Indian Institute of Technology, to
create a programme for casino games such as roulette. The extraordinary
result of that meeting was seen yesterday when PartyGaming, the company they
created, announced plans to float on the London stock market. Its PartyPoker
website is the dominant force in the explosive online poker market and the
business will be valued at up to $10bn, or a shade over Ł5bn - only a little
less than Marks & Spencer, or the combined value of British Airways and EMI.
Nils Pratley, "The porn princess, the Indian computer whizz and the poker
bet that made $10bn," The Guardian, June 3, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1498367,00.html?gusrc=rss
How to do your taxes for free
Everything you always wanted to know about form 1040 but were afraid to ask
from Taxes In-Depth ---
http://www.taxesindepth.com/
The IRS processed 224.4 million tax returns for the fiscal year 2004 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/tax_ex2.htm
Bob Jensen's tax helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
GAO: Underfunded Corporate Pensions 'Severe and Widespread'
Massive failures of defined-benefit pension plans,
shortfalls in pensions for state employees and the debts plaguing the
federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. are sparking worries about the
security of retirement benefits. Troubled United Airlines recently received
court approval to dump four pension plans, with a shortfall of $9.8 billion,
onto the PBGC. The PBGC, a government-sponsored insurance agency of sorts,
is funded by premiums paid by companies, and it is now facing a $23.3
billion deficit of its own. The Government Accountability Office (GAO), the
congressional watchdog agency, stated in a new report that underfunding of
pension plans grew from $39 billion in 2000 to more than $450 billion by
September 2004, the Associated Press reported.
"GAO: Underfunded Corporate Pensions 'Severe and Widespread',"
AccountingWeb, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100960
Of Metaphors and Moving Vans
Nietzsche somewhere remarks that a scholar will end
up consulting about 200 books in the course of a day’s work. This was not
(if memory serves) a compliment to academic industriousness. Trying to track
down the quotation just now, I find the typical Nietzschean attitude summed
up in The Genealogy of Morals: “The proficiency of our finest scholars,
their heedless industry, their heads smoking day and night, their very
craftsmanship – how often the real meaning of all this lies in the desire to
keep something hidden from oneself!” Well, be that as it may, one thing is
clear. If you pull down that many books and don’t reshelve them immediately,
you will definitely start losing things in the clutter. And photocopies or
JSTOR printouts only make the problem exponentially worse. The situation is
no less hopeless for a mere freelance essayist. I would like, for example,
to order some Chinese food from a particularly good restaurant, but the menu
is probably somewhere underneath a large pile of books and articles about
Paul Ricoeur. Does this reflect an ascetic imperative? Is it proof of “the
desire to keep something hidden from oneself”? What would it mean just to
throw the whole pile into a cardboard box and stash it under my desk for a
while? (And furthermore: Is there room?).
Scott McLemee, "Of Metaphors and Moving Vans," Inside Higher
Ed, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/02/mclemee
Ricoeur III
Last week, Margaret Soltan published a recollection
of Paul Ricoeur at her blog,
University
Diaries. He was, she noted, “Unfailingly
intellectually serious. No thigh-slapping, I can tell you that.” The one
exception was his delight in “a convoluted story he told about being in
Greece and seeing all these trucks that had METAPHOR written on them (this
was a seminar on metaphor). How could this be? Then he figured it out! They
were moving vans — metaphor is Greek for among other things, to carry! He
laughed with wild abandon at this.”Then, parenthetically, she apologizes if
her memory has played tricks on her. It didn’t. In the memoir portion of
Paul Ricoeur: His Life and His Work (University of Chicago, 1996), Charles
E. Reagan describes a visit with the philosopher in 1974, when he had just
finished writing The Rule of Metaphor: Multi-Disciplinary Studies of the
Creation of Meaning in Language (University of Toronto Press, 1978).
Scott McLemee, "Of Metaphors and Moving Vans," Inside Higher Ed, June
2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/02/mclemee
You can find Ricoeur I and II at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book05q2.htm#Ricoeur
Grade Inflation and Abdication
Over the last generation, most colleges and
universities have experienced considerable grade inflation. Much lamented by
traditionalists and explained away or minimized by more permissive faculty,
the phenomenon presents itself both as an increase in students’ grade point
averages at graduation as well as an increase in high grades and a decrease
in low grades recorded for individual courses. More prevalent in humanities
and social science than in science and math courses and in elite private
institutions than in public institutions, discussion about grade inflation
generates a great deal of heat, if not always as much light. While the
debate on the moral virtues of any particular form of grade distribution
fascinates as cultural artifact, the variability of grading standards has a
more practical consequence. As grades increasingly reflect an idiosyncratic
and locally defined performance levels, their value for outside consumers of
university products declines. Who knows what an “A” in American History
means? Is the A student one of the top 10 percent in the class or one of the
top 50 percent? Fuzziness in grading reflects a general fuzziness in
defining clearly what we teach our students and what we expect of them. When
asked to defend our grading practices by external observers — parents,
employers, graduate schools, or professional schools — our answers tend
toward a vague if earnest exposition on the complexity of learning, the
motivational differences in evaluation techniques, and the pedagogical value
of learning over grading. All of this may well be true in some abstract
sense, but our consumers find our explanations unpersuasive and on occasion
misleading.
John V. Lombardi, "Grade Inflation and Abdication," Inside Higher Ed,
June 3, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/03/lombardi
Bob Jensen's threads on grade inflation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm#GradeInflation
Where are the men in college?
For about a decade now, educators have been
noticing — and worrying about — a growing gender gap among college students,
57 percent of whom are female. Among high-school seniors, women are more
likely to have the ambition to go to college, to enroll, and then to do
well, according to Education Department data. But much of the attention of
those concerned about these figures has focused on subsets of the
undergraduate population where the gender gap showed up most quickly and
most dramatically. Community colleges have reported severe gender gaps for
years, which is consistent with studies showing that the gap in
college-going rates is greatest among low-income students. The gender gap is
quite large among black students, leading to significant gender gaps at
historically black colleges, and in black enrollments at other institutions.
And liberal arts colleges have struggled with the issue for years, with all
sorts of theories about why men prefer to go elsewhere.
Scott Jaschick, "Gender Gap at Flagships," Inside Higher Ed, June 3,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/03/gender
The Stem-Cell Also-Ran: America
These overseas triumphs are a reminder that
restrictions on federal funding for stem-cell research in the U.S., as well
as many state and federal threats to ban much of the research, are hindering
the pace of research in America. As part of an ongoing lobbying effort, 37
university presidents and chancellors sent Congress a letter on May 23,
arguing that progress in foreign labs is "an indication that U.S. scientists
are being hobbled in their pursuit of cures and therapies using this
promising research."
Jon Carey, "The Stem-Cell Also-Ran: America The Bush Administration's
restrictions on U.S. research will inflict major pain down the road as other
countries keep advancing," Business Week, May 27, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/AlsoRan
Biotechnology has finally come of age
This declaration may bring to mind the hype that
has swirled around biotech so many times in the past. But a growing number
of scientists and industry executives say today's enthusiasm is based on a
new reality: Drugs actually exist. There are 230 medicines and related
products created from biotech techniques. Last year alone, the Food & Drug
Administration approved 20 biotech drugs, among them treatments for
insomnia, multiple sclerosis, severe pain, chronic kidney disease,
incontinence, mouth sores, and cancer. The Tufts Center for the Study of
Drug Development estimates that at least 50 of 250 biotech drugs currently
in late-stage clinical trials should win FDA approval, a success rate almost
three times better than the pharma industry standard. "This is all a
continuum of discoveries that started in the early 1980s," says Joseph
Schlessinger, chairman of the pharmacology department at Yale School of
Medicine and a co-founder of Sugen, the company that created Sutent. "We are
now in a golden age of drug discovery."
"Biotech, Finally Yes, the business remains risky, but medical progress is
stunning," Business Week Cover Story, June 13, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/BiotechJune13
Pros and cons of naming a
class valedictorian
"BEST IN CLASS," by Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker, June 6, 2006
---
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050606fa_fact
Brown Recluse spider bites:
I won't vouch for this, but you may want to know about
"Finally, a very effective, natural, drug free product specifically designed
to heal Brown Recluse spider bites" ---
http://www.brown-recluse.com/
Those less-than-honest bankers
With help from Bank of America Corp., two Texas
entrepreneurs sheltered more than $100 million from U.S. taxes on this small
island between Ireland and England for more than a decade. Now the bank is
under scrutiny in connection with possible securities and money-laundering
violations involving its work with the two, Sam and Charles Wyly, and
possibly other wealthy clients seeking to help shelter their fortunes from
taxes. The Wylys are a pair of famously entrepreneurial brothers in their
70s who made billions in software and retail businesses.
Glenn R. Simpson, "Government Probes Tax Shelters Used to Shield
Stock-Option Gains," The Wall Street Journal, June 3, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111776598624150196,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
The European Disease
The French unemployment rate has hovered around 10%
for nearly a decade, and almost half of the jobless have been out of work
for at least a year. If the U.S. had an unemployment rate as high as France,
there would be about six million more non-working Americans -- the
equivalent of placing every worker in Michigan on the jobless rolls. Our
point here isn't to engage in gratuitous French-bashing. The truth is that
the economic anemia afflicting France has become the standard bill of health
to varying degrees in virtually all of the nations of Old Europe,
particularly Germany and Italy. Once upon a time the intellectual elites in
Europe and the U.S. trumpeted the economic accomplishments of European
social welfare state policies. Today the conclusion is nearly inescapable
that this economic model simply doesn't work to create jobs, wealth or
dynamism.
"The European Disease," The Wall Street Journal, June 3, 2005; Page
A10 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111775897564249985,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Also see "Who's Laughing Now?" ---
http://www.reason.com/re/060105.shtml
PwC'a auditors either ignored or missed the warning signs of
accounting fraud at AIG
For years, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP gave a clean
bill of financial health to American International Group Inc., only to watch
the insurance giant disclose a long list of accounting problems this spring.
But in checking for trouble, PwC might have asked the audit committee of
AIG's board of directors, which is supposed to supervise the outside
accountant's work. For two years, the committee said that it couldn't vouch
for AIG's accounting. In 2001 and 2002, the five-member directors committee,
which included such figures as former U.S. trade representative Carla A.
Hills and, in 2002, former National Association of Securities Dealers
chairman and chief executive Frank G. Zarb, reported in an annual corporate
filing that the committee's oversight did "not provide an independent basis
to determine that management has maintained appropriate accounting and
financial reporting principles." Further, the committee said, it couldn't
assure that the audit had been carried out according to normal standards or
even that PwC was in fact "independent." While the distancing statement by
the audit committee is not unprecedented, the AIG committee's statement is
one of the strongest he has seen, said Itzhak Sharav, an accounting
professor at Columbia University. "Their statement, the phrasing, all of it
seems to be to get the reader to understand that they're going out of their
way to emphasize the possibility of problems that are undisclosed and
undiscovered, and they want no part of it." Language in audit committee
reports ran the gamut . . .
"Accountants Missed AIG Group's Red Flags," SmartPros, May 31, 2005
---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x48436.xml
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC's legal problems are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/Fraud001.htm#PwC
Much suggests that Andersen's reputation was destroyed before the
original obstruction of justice verdict
Andersen was already losing major clients who feared that having Andersen as
an auditor was raising the cost of capital due to Andersen's reputation for
incompetent audits.
A look at the Andersen Verdict First the news announcement from Jim
Mahar's blog on June 1, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
From the NY Times ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/01/business/01bizcourt.html?
"WASHINGTON, May 31 - With a brief, pointed
and unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court on Tuesday overturned
Arthur Andersen's conviction for shredding Enron accounting
documents as that company was collapsing in one of the nation's
biggest corporate scandals."
From The BBC ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4596949.stm
"Chief Justice William H Rehnquist said the
instructions were too vague for the jurors to decide correctly whether
Andersen had obstructed justice."
While much has been being made of the Supreme Court's ruling, it will
have little affect on the company.
From the New York Times: Justices Reject Auditor Verdict in Enron Scandal
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/01/business/01bizcourt.html?dlbk
"But the decision represents little more than a
Pyrrhic victory for Andersen, which lost its clients after being
indicted on obstruction of justice charges and has no chance of
returning as a viable enterprise. The accounting firm has shrunk from
28,000 employees in the United States to a skeleton crew of 200"
Much evidence suggests that the auditors' reputation was destroyed before
the court verdict (see Chaney-Philipich (2002), Callen-Morel, Godbey-Mahar
(2004) and many others who both found that Andersen audited firms suffered
as Andersen's reputation fall in the aftermath of the Enron debacle.
For instance from Godbey-Mahar paper (in Research in Finance 2004) ---
http://snipurl.com/AndersenUpdate
"Both long-term and short-term event-studies
were used to examine the effects on implied volatility, of events that
were deemed as damaging to Andersen'�s reputation. The results of all of
the tests yield strong evidence that ....that auditor reputation plays
an important role in reducing information asymmetries between investors
and the audited firm." Which is to say, while we can feel bad that the
jury supposedly got the case wrong, it is unlikely to have made much
difference. Even prior to the trial, most firms had dropped Andersen as
their auditor and the market was penalizing firms who used Andersen.
What does matter however is how this ruling will affect future cases.
Again from the NY Times ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/01/business/01assess.html?dlbk
"...in truth the Supreme Court's judgment
simply underscores the significance of a rule in white-collar cases: a
jury cannot properly convict without first being required to conclude
that a defendant had intended to engage in wrongdoing."
Bob Jensen's threads on the implosion of Andersen are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
Would you rather work with a jerk or a likable fool?
It is a universal dilemma. What to do with the jerk
at work, the person who is so disliked by their colleagues that no one wants
to work with them? The traditional answer is to tolerate them if they are at
least half-competent—on the grounds that competent jerks can be trained to
be otherwise, while much-loved bunglers cannot. An article in the latest
issue of the Harvard Business Review suggests that such an approach
seriously underestimates the value of being liked. In a study of over 10,000
work relationships at five very different organisations, Tiziana Casciaro
and Miguel Sousa Lobo, academics at Harvard Business School and the Fuqua
School of Business respectively, found that (given the choice) people
consistently and overwhelmingly prefer to work with a “lovable fool” than
with a competent jerk.
"Wise enough to play the fool?" The Economist, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/business/displayStory.cfm?story_id=4033731
Drawing uncovered of 'Nazi nuke'
Historians working in Germany and the US claim to
have found a 60-year-old diagram showing a Nazi nuclear bomb. It is the only
known drawing of a "nuke" made by Nazi experts and appears in a report held
by a private archive. The researchers who brought it to light say the
drawing is a rough schematic and does not imply the Nazis built, or were
close to building, an atomic bomb. But a detail in the report hints some
Nazi scientists may have been closer to that goal than was previously
believed. The Nazis were far away from a 'classic' atomic bomb. But they
hoped to combine a 'mini-nuke' with a rocket
"Drawing uncovered of 'Nazi nuke'," BBC News, June 1, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4598955.stm
Air Force Academy Leader Admits Religious Intolerance at School
He (Superintendent of the Air Force
Academy) said he had admonished the academy's No. 2
commander, Brig. Gen. Johnny Weida, a born-again Christian, for sending an
e-mail message promoting the National Day of Prayer. "We sat down and said,
'This is not right,' and he acknowledged that," General Rosa said, adding
that there had been other incidents that crossed the line. "Perception is
reality. We don't have respect."
"Air Force Academy Leader Admits Religious Intolerance at School," The
New York Times, June 4, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/04/national/04airforce.html
"Would You, Could You, Should You Blog?" by Eva M. Lang, Journal of
Accountancy, June 2005 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/jun2005/lang.htm
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
BLOGS (SHORT FOR WEB LOGS)
are an information-sharing tool with
many business possibilities. They
offer commentary on a variety of
topics with links to Web sites or
other online resources. Low
operating costs make blogging a
great marketing and knowledge
management option for small firms.
A BLOG TYPICALLY IS TEXT
WITH few graphics. It can
be created with blogging software
that is free and simple to use. A
basic blog requires no special
technical skills.
BESIDES HELPING TO PUBLICIZE
A FIRM and showcase its
niche specialties, blogs can allow
everyone in the firm to share
information quickly or to track
sales leads.
FIRMS CAN USE INTERNAL
KNOWLEDGE BLOGS to help
current employees work more
efficiently and to get new hires up
to speed quickly. As a repository of
“institutional memory,” knowledge
blogs can remind current employees
of policies and procedures, link to
documents employees need to read and
document best practices. Team
members can enter remarks to create
a record of actions and decisions.
SO FAR THERE ARE ONLY A FEW
accounting blogs. Most CPA
blogs cover tax topics but there are
a few in niche areas such as estate
planning, business valuation and
Sarbanes-Oxley.
TO CREATE A BLOG A FIRM WILL
NEED TO select a blog
publisher, create an account and
start adding content. Bloggers must
scrupulously adhere to the golden
rule of blogging: “Thou must update
frequently.” The door is wide open
to new and innovative uses of this
technology for accounting firms. |
|
|
Bob Jensen's threads on Weblogs and blogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
Music: For Erika If You
Ever Leave Me ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/if.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
The digital living room ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1212
Are Ashkenazi Jews smarter than the rest of us?
The idea that some ethnic groups may, on average,
be more intelligent than others is one of those hypotheses that dare not
speak its name. But Gregory Cochran, a noted scientific iconoclast, is
prepared to say it anyway. He is that rare bird, a scientist who works
independently of any institution. He helped popularise the idea that some
diseases not previously thought to have a bacterial cause were actually
infections, which ruffled many scientific feathers when it was first
suggested. And more controversially still, he has suggested that
homosexuality is caused by an infection. Even he, however, might tremble at
the thought of what he is about to do. Together with Jason Hardy and Henry
Harpending, of the University of Utah, he is publishing, in a forthcoming
edition of the Journal of Biosocial Science, a paper which not only suggests
that one group of humanity is more intelligent than the others, but explains
the process that has brought this about. The group in question are Ashkenazi
Jews. The process is natural selection.
"Natural Genius," The Economist, June 2, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=4032638
Black and Latino enrollment would tank, while white enrollments would
hardly be affected
What if the Supreme Court had banned
affirmative action? What if colleges moved away from the use of affirmative
action on their own? A new study by two Princeton University researchers
uses admissions data from elite colleges to portray what would happen in
such a world without affirmative action. In short, black and Latino
enrollment would tank, while white enrollments would hardly be affected. The
big winners would be Asian applicants, who appear to face “disaffirmative
action” right now. They would pick up about four out of five spots lost by
black and Latino applicants. The study was conducted by Thomas Espenshade, a
professor of sociology at Princeton, and Chang Chung, a senior staff member
in the university’s Office of Population Research. The study will appear in
the June issue of Social Science Quarterly.
Scott Jaschik, "Demographic Dislocation," Inside Higher Ed, June 7, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/07/affirm
I can go almost as fast when somebody yells out that dinner is ready
Scientists at the Sandia National Labs in
Albuquerque, New Mexico have accelerated a small plate from zero to 76,000
mph in less than a second. The speed of the thrust was a new record for
Sandia’s “Z Machine” – not only the fastest gun in the West, but in the
world, too. The Z Machine is now able to propel small plates at 34
kilometers a second, faster than the 30 kilometers per second that Earth
travels through space in its orbit about the Sun. That’s 50 times faster
than a rifle bullet, and three times the velocity needed to...
"Gun Play: Inside Look at the Outer Planets," Space.com, June 7, 2005
---
http://www.space.com/astronotes/astronotes.html
Florida A&M receives a gift that keeps on taking
A Florida newspaper has revealed a highly
unusual gift to Florida A&M University — in which the donor of an endowed
chair ended up holding the position he paid to create. The St. Petersburg
Times reported that Shirley Cunningham Jr., a Kentucky lawyer, gave Florida
A&M $1 million to endow a chair in the law school in 2001. Under a state
matching program, Florida then provided $750,000 for the chair. According to
the newspaper, Cunningham was then hired to fill the chair and paid a salary
of $100,000 a year — even though the newspaper said Florida A&M officials
could find no evidence that Cunningham performed any work for the salary.
Scott Jaschik, "Donor Reportedly Endowed a Chair — and Filled It," Inside
Higher Ed, June 8, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/08/famu
Advice about mortgages from Jane Bryant Quinn, Newsweek, June
6, 2005, Page 41.
For great tips on mortgages, visit Guttentag's (a professor at
Wharton) site ---
http://www.mtgprofessor.com/
For quick quotes, check eloan.com ---
http://www.eloan.com/
Ignore the "cheap loan" promises in your e-mail
. . . Spammers merely collect names to sell to lenders --- or worse, pry for
personal information.
Bob Jensen's threads on Internet frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on investing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#Finance
Now you can easily share your expertise on the Web
The world is full of self-proclaimed experts, but
not all of them are publishing online -- yet. A San Francisco-area
entrepreneur hopes to change that with a new wiki that's open to the world.
Joanna Glassner, "Wiki Targets How-To Buffs," Wired News, June 8,
2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67765,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3
Bob Jensen's threads on Wiki's are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Wiki
Microsoft, Lenovo unveil new pen-based Tablet PC
China's Lenovo Group Ltd. <0992.HK>, which bought
IBM's personal computer business last month, unveiled its first pen-based
computer on Monday, which runs Microsoft Corp.'s <MSFT.O> Tablet PC version
of Windows. The world's largest software maker said that the debut of the
laptop computer, the ThinkPad X41, will help to broaden the market for the
portable computers to business users.
"Microsoft, Lenovo unveil new pen-based Tablet PC," Reuters, The
Washington Post, June 7, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/07/AR2005060700120.html?referrer=email
His Decade of Chasing Skilling
A New York businessman wants to question Jeffrey
Skilling under oath, insisting that the ex-Enron chief executive was at the
center of a scheme that robbed him of hundreds of millions of dollars in the
1990s.
John Emshwiller, "His Decade of Chasing Skilling: Bernard Glatzer, From the
Bronx, Dogs Enron Ex-CEO for Deposition; His Lawsuit Helps Raise Questions,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 7, 2005; Page C1---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111810792577952529,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Mental Illness Said to Affect One-Quarter of Americans
More Americans are seeking treatment for mental
illnesses than ever before, but most of them fail to get adequate care,
according to a major new government study. In the once-a-decade report
funded by the National Institutes of Health, researchers found that
one-quarter of Americans had a psychiatric disorder in the year prior to the
survey, and 40% of them sought treatment, up from just 25% who sought
treatment in the previous report a decade ago. The report, which is intended
to provide a national snapshot of the most commonly occurring mental
illnesses, covered conditions ranging from obsessive compulsive disorder,
attention deficit disorder to depression and bipolar disorder. (Rarer
conditions such as schizophrenia, which is believed to affect just 1% of the
population, weren't included.)
Leila Abboud, "Mental Illness Said to Affect One-Quarter of Americans: NIH
Report Cites Problems With Adequate Treatment; A Debate Over Definitions,"
The Wall Street Journal, June 7, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111807563692851889,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Also see
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/106/108372.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_03
Updates on diploma mills
Office of Postsecondary Education ---
http://www.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ope/index.html?src=mr
Bob Jensen's threads on diploma mills are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill
Bristol-Myers to pay $300 million to settle an accounting scandal
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. is
expected to pay about $300 million to settle a criminal investigation by the
Justice Department into its alleged accounting manipulations from several
years ago, people familiar with the situation said. As part of the
settlement, longtime board member James D. Robinson III is expected to
become chairman, according to a person familiar with the situation. Current
Chairman and Chief Executive Peter R. Dolan would retain the CEO title.
Paul Davies et al., "Bristol-Myers Expected to Pay $300 Million to Settle
Probe," The Wall Street Journal, June 6, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111801100540351254,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
The independent auditing firm of PwC insisted on an earnings restatement for
the year 2002.
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Interactive Human Migration Map ---
http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/realeve/interactive/migration.html
Human Migration Simulation
Early humans migrating from Africa carried small
genetic differences like so much flotsam in an ocean current. Today’s
studies give only a snapshot of where that genetic baggage came to rest
without revealing the tides that brought it there. Now researchers at the
Stanford University School of Medicine have devised a model for pinpointing
where mutations first appeared, providing a new way to trace the migratory
path of our earliest ancestors. The study was led by Luca Cavalli-Sforza,
PhD, emeritus professor of genetics, who has spent most of his career
tracking the evolution of modern humans. Much of his current work involves
following mutations in the Y chromosome, which is passed exclusively from
father to son, as humans migrated from Africa and spread to the rest of the
world during the past 50,000 years. These mutations, most of which cause no
physical change, tend to appear at a constant rate, providing a genetic
timer. For example, if a population has 10 mutations after 50,000 years of
evolution from the common ancestor in Africa, then the fifth mutation
probably arose 25,000 years ago. But where was the population located at
that time? Until now genetics hasn’t had an answer.
"HUMAN MIGRATION TRACKED IN STANFORD COMPUTER SIMULATION," January 21, 2004
---
http://mednews.stanford.edu/releases/2004/january/migration.htm
Insurance, Life Expectancy and the Cost of Firearm Deaths in the U.S.
While the U.S. operates the most expensive health
care system in the world, its citizens are neither healthier nor live longer
than citizens in other countries. In addition, while the U.S. is considered
among the safest countries in the world, deaths from gunshot wounds are
staggeringly high. In 2000, the U.S. recorded close to 11,000 firearm
homicides. The European Union reported fewer than 1,300 firearm homicides
for the same year. In Japan, the number was 22. Jean Lemaire, professor of
insurance and actuarial science at Wharton, argues that these facts should
be looked at in tandem. In a recent paper, Lemaire works through the medical
and financial impact of firearms on American society.
Knowledge@Wharton, June 1-14, 2005 ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/
The complete paper is at
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1214
Question:
What has been one of the most massive, if not these most massive, fraud in
the history of the U.S.?
Answer:
The attorney/physician rip off on phony asbestos health damage claims.
"Diagnosing for Dollars A court battle over silicosis shines a harsh
light on mass medical screeners—the same people whose diagnoses have cost
asbestos defendants billions," by Roger Parloff, Fortune, June 13,
2005, pp. 96-110 ---
http://www.fortune.com/fortune/articles/0,15114,1066756,00.html
How, then, to account for this: Of 8,629
people diagnosed with silicosis now suing in federal court in Corpus
Christi, 5,174—or 60%—are "asbestos retreads," i.e., people who have
previously filed claims for asbestos-related disease.
That anomaly turns out to be just one of
many in the Corpus Christi case that sorely challenge medical
explanation. At a hearing in February, U.S. District Judge Janis Graham
Jack characterized the evidence before her as raising "great red flags
of fraud," and a federal grand jury in Manhattan is now looking into the
situation, according to two people who have been subpoenaed.
The real importance of those proceedings,
however, is not what they reveal about possible fraud in silica
litigation but what they suggest about a possible fraud of vastly
greater dimensions. It's one that may have been afflicting asbestos
litigation for almost 20 years, resulting in billions of dollars of
payments to claimants who weren't sick and to the attorneys who
represented them. Asbestos litigation—the original mass tort—has
bankrupted more than 60 companies and is expected to eventually cost
defendants and their insurers more than $200 billion, of which $70
billion has already been paid.
The odor around asbestosis diagnosis has
been so foul for so long that by 1999, professor Lester Brickman of the
Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law was referring to asbestos litigation
as a "massively fraudulent enterprise." At the request of his defamation
lawyer, Brickman says, he toned that down to "massive, specious
claiming"
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's working paper on the history
of fraud in the U.S. is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/415wp/AmericanHistoryOfFraud.htm
The Institute for the Interdisciplinary Study of Human & Machine
Cognition (IHMC) ---
http://www.ihmc.us/index.php
The Institute for the Interdisciplinary Study
of Human & Machine Cognition (IHMC) was established in 1990 as an
interdisciplinary research unit of the University of West Florida. Since
that time, IHMC has grown into one of the nation's premier research
institutes with more than 115 researchers and staff investigating a
broad range of topics related to understanding cognition in both humans
and machines with a particular emphasis on building computational tools
to leverage and amplify human cognitive and perceptual capacities.
In a broader context, much of the research effort at IHMC is focused on
what has become known as human-centered computing. This emerging concept
represents a significant shift in thinking about intelligent machines
and, indeed, about information technology in general. Human-centered
computing embodies a “systems view,” in which human thought and action
and technological systems are seen as inextricably linked and equally
important aspects of analysis, design, and evaluation. This framework is
focused less on stand-alone exemplars of mechanical cognitive talent,
and is concerned more with computational aids designed to amplify human
cognitive and perceptual abilities. Essentially these are cognitive
prostheses, computational systems that leverage and extend human
intellectual capacities, just as eyeglasses are a sort of ocular
prosthesis. The prostheses metaphor implies the importance of designing
systems that fit the human and machine components together in ways that
synergistically exploit their respective strengths and mitigate their
respective weaknesses.
Financial Aid Rules for College Change, and Families Pay More
Taken together, these changes, some based on overly
optimistic predictions of inflation, have required families to count a
greater share of their incomes and assets toward college expenses before
becoming eligible for financial aid. As a consequence, tens of thousands of
low-income students will no longer be eligible for federal grants;
middle-class families are digging deeper into their savings; and some
colleges are putting up their own money to make up the difference.
Greg Winter, "Financial Aid Rules for College Change, and Families Pay
More," The New York Times, June 6, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/06/education/06aid.html?
Whatever Happened to Polio?
http://americanhistory.si.edu/polio/
Better blue than red
Those who teach in the elementary schools now are
cautioned to use colors other than red when grading papers, because
according to these experts students find red marks on papers too stressful.
In a recent CBS News report, Joseph Foriska, who is the principal of
Thaddeus Stevens Elementary School in Pittsburgh, PA said "the color is
everything." "You could hold up a paper that says 'Great work!' and it won't
even matter if it is written in red." Foriska apparently feels that messages
written in red on a student's paper come across as somehow derogatory or
demeaning. He is not alone in this movement towards a more politically
correct hue for grading papers. These days teachers across the country are
ditching their red pens in favor of blue or purple tones, which are
perceived to be less threatening.
Mark Shapiro, "Irreverent Commentary on the State of Education in America
Today," The Irascible Professor, June 4, 2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-06-04-05.htm
Multimedia Encyclopedia of Chicago History ---
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/
Bob Jensen's history bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
New public versus private debt?
Have you ever wondered why some firms issue
convertible debt privately whereas other firms choose to issue their debt
publicly? Well wonder no more! Devrim Yaman has answered at least the
majority of our questions in her Bquest article. Information story explains
public vs private choice and the answer? Where information asymmetry
problems are great, firms choose private placements. Which is what I think
we would have suspected, but now we also have some empirical evidence
---
http://www.westga.edu/~bquest/2005/choice.pdf
As quoted from Jim Mahar's blog on June 7, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Social responsibility investing at TIAA-CREF
TIAA-CREF announced last week that it had created a
senior level position to oversee “socially responsible” investing and hired
a well-respected official to fill it. The pension giant, which has faced a
campaign from some of the academics who participate in its funds to use
criteria of social and corporate responsibility to guide more of its
investments, hired Amy Muska O’Brien as its director of social investing.
She will both oversee the company’s Social Choice Account, which it created
in 1990, and promote other kinds of socially conscious investing within
TIAA-CREF.
Doug Lederman, "TIAA-CREF Gets Social," Inside Higher Ed, June 8,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/08/tiaa
Learning U.S. history with EASE from Michigan State University ---
http://www.easehistory.org/
EASE History is a rich learning environment
that supports the learning of US history. Over 600 videos and
photographs are currently available in EASE History.
EASE History has three entry points: Historical
Events, Campaign Ads, and Core Values. Learn about US History through
the prism of US presidential campaign ads, better understand the
complexities of campaign issues and their historical context by looking
at historical events, and explore the meanings of core values by
examining how these values have been applied in both historical events
and campaign ads. Three learning modes, single and multiple theme
searches, and resources support the comparing and contrasting of
historical cases. EASE History's goal is to support experience
acceleration- to help learners think more like historians.
Bob Jensen's history bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
June 9, 2005 message from L.J. Urbano - CityTownInfo.com
[citytowninfo@citytowninfo.com]
I noticed that your web site links to useful
reference resources so I am writing to let you know about a new
reference site that may be of interest to you and your site visitors.
CityTownInfo.com (
http://www.citytowninfo.com/ ) is a
collection of information on U.S. cities and towns. The site includes
almanac-like reference data, property statistics, local weather reports,
links to the official city web sites and maps for about 3500 cities. The
site also includes a summary article on about 50 major cities.
The site will be continually improved. We have
plans for adding info on local schools, airports, libraries, and places
of worship over the coming weeks. We’re open to suggestion on other
information you might find appropriate for this site.
If you believe that CityTownInfo.com may be
valuable to those who visit your web site, then we ask that you consider
adding a link from trinity.edu.
I added the above link to the following sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/sanantonio.htm
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Travel
I added the following Tidbits collected by Debbie Bowling
Macromedia to Build Broader
Platform
Macromedia Inc. said it is building a broader technology offering around its
Web graphics and video software, highlighting the strategy behind the
company's recent agreement to be acquired by Adobe Systems Inc. Macromedia,
based in San Francisco, is expected to announce new capabilities of its
Flash software, a multimedia "player" that is installed on most personal
computers, as well as on many mobile phones and other devices. In addition,
Macromedia is disclosing details of its expanding Flash "platform," a
collection of products that already accounts for more than half of the
company's revenue.
Dow Jones Newswires, "Macromedia
to Build Broader Platform," The Wall Street Journal,
June 6, 2005; Page B2,
http://snipurl.com/macro0606
For Morgan Stanley, Difficult
Task Lies Ahead
Morgan Stanley's attempt to
repair its image got a boost with news that Donald Kempf, the securities
firm's embattled general counsel, is retiring. The more difficult task --
finding someone capable of overhauling the division -- lies ahead.
Mr. Kempf's retirement, announced
Friday, comes in the wake of a number of regulatory and legal dustups under
the 68-year-old general counsel's watch since he arrived from Chicago law
firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP in 1999. The most recent black eye: a $1.45
billion judgment against Morgan Stanley in a Florida fraud case brought by
billionaire financier Ronald Perelman.
Mr. Kempf's exit gives Morgan
Stanley the chance to bring in a high-profile outsider. The company is
focused on luring a high-level former regulator who could burnish Morgan
Stanley's legal reputation. Already, Morgan Stanley in early May hired David
Heleniak, a prominent corporate deals lawyer and gave him oversight of the
general counsel's office, among other things. Morgan Stanley is expected to
name a successor to Mr. Kempf in a matter of weeks, according to a person
familiar with the matter.
"Building a different culture is
an extraordinarily difficult task and changing one person like Mr. Kempf may
be a step in the right direction but it is not a fundamental reform," said
Henry Hu, a corporate- and securities-law professor at the University of
Texas at Austin.
Shoring up the legal group is just
one of the challenges facing Morgan Stanley and its chief executive, Philip
Purcell. Mr. Purcell is under attack from alumni shareholders who are
calling for his ouster and a breakup of the company. The rancor followed a
top-level management shuffling this year that irked many old and former
Morgan Stanley hands.
The tumult at Morgan Stanley has
surprised many on Wall Street. For years, Morgan Stanley, one of the world's
most highly regarded securities firms, prided itself on stable leadership
and orderly management successions. It avoided scandals and regulatory
scraps that damaged a number of big rivals in the 1990s, including Salomon
Brothers, Prudential Securities Inc. and Kidder Peabody & Co.
Mr. Kempf, a long-time friend of
Mr. Purcell, established a hard-nosed legal reputation, reflecting his
background as a fierce litigator. It is a style that sometimes didn't serve
him on Wall Street, where companies often opt to quietly settle cases rather
than fight with regulators.
Along with paying $125 million to
settle charges of faulty stock research, Morgan Stanley was stung by
regulators for other infractions. In 2002, Morgan Stanley, along with five
others, paid regulators $8.25 million for violating rules requiring
securities firms to retain emails for three years, in case the messages are
needed for investigations or disputes. Last July, it was one of three
companies fined $250,000 each for failing to hand over documents in cases
involving investor complaints. Not long after, it agreed to pay $2.2 million
to regulators for delays in disclosing 1,800 complaints and incidents of
misconduct. The company didn't admit or deny wrongdoing in these actions.
"Hands down they are the most combative firm on Wall Street," says Miami
lawyer Mark Raymond, who has represented numerous investors against the
company.
A Morgan Stanley spokesman said
the company settled "many more" cases under Mr. Kempf than it has fought.
In recent years, Morgan Stanley
has tried to mend fences with legal foes. In 2004, it brought in New York
Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's former lieutenant, Eric Dinallo, to help in
that effort.
But it was the Perelman case, more
than rocky dealings with regulators, that spelled the end of Mr. Kempf's
career. Mr. Perelman's lawsuit, which claimed Morgan Stanley had
fraudulently misled him on a deal, was initially considered no more than a
nuisance. Early in 2003, the legal department, headed by Mr. Kempf,
suggested that the firm consider settling the suit for $20 million despite
its view, which the investment banking division shared at the time, that the
suit had no merit. On that basis, the investment banking division was
reluctant to support a settlement.
In the end, the merits of the case
didn't matter. Instead, Morgan Stanley's legal team, under Mr. Kempf, so
badly botched the discovery process -- the production of documents important
to the case -- that the trial judge became infuriated. The judge entered a
default judgment, saying the jury had to assume that Morgan Stanley had
defrauded Mr. Perelman when they advised on a deal involving one of Mr.
Perelman's companies.
Mr. Kempf, who moved to Florida to
deal with the fallout from the Perelman case, had dinner with Mr. Purcell
Thursday night in New York to discuss his departure, according to a person
familiar with the matter. He expected to stay around until the end of the
year to ensure an orderly transition, this person said.
SUSANNE CRAIG, (Ann
Davis contributed to this article), "For Morgan
Stanley, Difficult Task Lies Ahead," The Wall Street Journal,
June 6, 2005; Page C1,
http://snipurl.com/morst0606
Life After Donaldson
COMMENTARY
The
resignation of SEC Chairman William Donaldson and the nomination of Chris
Cox as the new chairman could not come at a more propitious moment. We are
also witnessing the imminent departure of influential pro-regulation
Commissioner Harvey Goldschmid and the continued presence of the two
commissioners who understand that too much, or wrongheaded, regulation can
easily impede business efficiency and impoverish investors. Various efforts
are now well underway to correct some of the profound errors of recent
corporate legal history....continued in article.
HENRY MANNE, "Life
After Donaldson," The Wall Street Journal,
June 6, 2005; Page A10,
http://snipurl.com/don0606
Washington Mutual to Buy Providian for $6.45 Billion
Washington Mutual, the nation's largest savings and loan, announced today
that it would buy the
Providian Financial Corporation
in a $6.45 billion deal that will expand its credit card offerings to highly
profitable low- and middle-income customers.
The cash-and-stock transaction is the latest
step in Washington Mutual's plans to rapidly expand its branch network
outside the Pacific Northwest to more than 2,000 outlets across the country.
It should also help expand and diversify its consumer banking offerings.
Providian will become Washington Mutual's fourth major business unit and
will operate under current management out of its San Francisco headquarters.
Washington Mutual, which is based in Seattle,
said it expected the acquisition to add to its earnings within a year once
the deal is completed by the end of 2005.
"The transaction provides Providian shareholders
financially attractive terms while allowing us to take the card business to
the next level," said Joseph Saunders, Providian's chairman and chief
executive. "Washington Mutual's size and resources will allow us to operate
with a lower cost structure and greater efficiency."
Under the terms of the agreement, Providian
stockholders will receive 0.45 Washington Mutual shares for each of their
Providian shares, paid 89 percent in stock and 11 percent in cash. Based on
Friday's closing price, the implied per-share purchase price is $18.71, the
company said.
Providian cardholders should expect no change in
their accounts, policies, or payment procedures, the companies said.
ERIC DASH "Washington Mutual to Buy Providian for
$6.45 Billion," The New York Times,
Published: June 6, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/wamu0606
Apple Plans to Switch From I.B.M. to Intel for Chips
SAN FRANCISCO, June 5 - Steven P. Jobs is
preparing to take an unprecedented gamble by abandoning
Apple Computer's
14-year commitment to chips developed by
I.B.M. and
Motorola in favor of
Intel processors for
his Macintosh computers, industry executives informed of the decision said
Sunday.
The move is a chesslike gambit in a broader
industry turf war that pits the traditional personal computer industry
against an emerging world of consumer electronics focused on the digital
home.
"This is a seismic shift in the world of
personal computing and consumer electronics," said Richard Doherty,
president of the Envisioneering Group, a Seaford, N.Y., computer and
consumer electronics industry consulting firm. "It is bound to rock the
industry, but it will also be a phenomenal engineering challenge for
Apple."...continued in article.
JOHN MARKOFF and
STEVE LOHR "Apple Plans to Switch From I.B.M. to
Intel for Chips," The New York Times, June 6, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/apt0606
Women Are Keen to Shop Online. Merchants Are Eager to
Oblige.
INTERNET merchants are starting to pay more attention to the group chiefly
responsible for propping up the industry's growth: women.
While online sales growth has slowed in
categories traditionally dominated by male buyers, like computer hardware
and software, sales of cosmetics, fragrances, home goods and other items
typically aimed at female shoppers have soared.
"We've seen this trend coming for a few years,
but now we're actually seeing the numbers come in," said Carrie Johnson, an
analyst with
Forrester Research
and the author of a report on online sales that was issued late last month
by Shop.org, an industry trade group.
According to the report, sales of cosmetics and
fragrances grew 58 percent last year, while sales of health and beauty
products and home goods jumped by more than 33 percent over the previous
year. Sales of computer hardware and software grew just 13 percent. Over
all, online commerce sales increased 24 percent.
Ms. Johnson and other analysts attribute the
trend to the increasing online experience of women, who were slower than men
to embrace the Internet but are now increasingly relying on it to buy goods.
Additionally, online merchants are developing new features and services for
women shoppers that would be difficult to replicate offline.
Take the Lands' End Swim Finder feature,
introduced this spring. The service lets women choose swimsuits that
"enhance or de-emphasize" certain body areas, allowing a shopper to see a
version of the suit on a three-dimensional likeness of her body.
According to Ed Whitehead, the chief marketing
officer of Lands' End, which is a division of Sears, the feature
demonstrates how online retailers are changing the way they sell to women.
"This channel has always been very
transactional," Mr. Whitehead said. "You can go online and check out, but it
hasn't given you any kind of experience. We had a few tools like that, but
we really didn't talk about them."
Mr. Whitehead said customer research helped the
company understand just how much women hate shopping for swimsuits. "It's a
horrifying experience," he said, citing problems such as "poorly lit rooms,
children or husbands in tow" and a shortage of sales clerks in many stores.
Mr. Whitehead would not quantify how much the
Swim Finder service has helped business, saying only that sales are
"fantastic right now." Those sales, he added, have been followed by fewer
returns and customer service calls than past swimsuit sales, because women
are more likely to be satisfied with their purchases.
According to a report released last week by the
research and consulting firms ForeSee Results and FGI Research, such online
sales features could be making a difference with female shoppers.
The firms surveyed customers of the 40 most
popular online retailers and found that on a 100-point scale, women were
more satisfied than men with online shopping. Overall satisfaction scores
were 85 for women and 80 for men in 2004.
According to Ms. Johnson, of Forrester, that
satisfaction level does not extend to an important subset of women - those
age 35 and younger. Ms. Johnson said that in a recent Forrester survey, of
the 28 percent of North Americans who have not shopped online, those 35 and
younger showed some of the strongest resistance to online shopping. Among
other things, young women objected to high shipping costs and to waiting for
items to be delivered. Also, 23 percent of the group did not have credit or
debit cards - more than twice the online average.
Online retailers can ill afford to let young
women stray, because women make a vast majority of purchasing decisions once
they have families. "Most retailers focus on young men, but they're already
sold on online shopping," Ms. Johnson said.
Ms. Johnson said that as retailers seek more
efficient ways to sell, they risk losing sight of merchandising elements
that women might appreciate. The Web is "not focused enough on the
experience of shopping - nothing flashy, just engaging people in a way that
makes them feel comfortable, loyal and satisfied," she said.
Felix Carbullido, who oversees
Gap.com,
said such an effort involved a delicate balance. "We're not walking away
from convenience, but we definitely want to capture more of the emotional
side of the shopping experience," he said.
To do that, Mr. Carbullido said Gap.com had more
aggressively expanded its editorial features, including tips on dressing for
various occasions. The site has also enhanced its swimsuit-assistant feature
to allow women to see how a suit looks on a model, and from behind. In
addition, the site last month upgraded a feature helping women choose the
right bra to go with some clothing.
The prevalence of high-speed Internet
connections also helps the site market to women more effectively, Mr.
Carbullido said, because it can offer things like music downloads. In a
recently completed promotion, Gap.com visitors could download a free song
from the singer Joss Stone - a promotion that was particularly successful
with the site's younger users.
For
Amazon.com, whose
practices are closely watched and often imitated, an emotionally engaging
shopping experience is, simply enough, one that is convenient and cheap.
Among the site's most recent additions are
categories aimed at women shoppers, like gourmet food and wedding
merchandise. Ms. Johnson, of Forrester, pointed to the wedding category, in
particular, as a departure for Amazon, in that it is rife with editorial
features, video and photography aimed at appealing to women shoppers.
But according to Kathy Savitt, a vice president
at Amazon, the wedding section is different from other Amazon categories
because its users require more coaching about how to outfit a household, for
instance, than other users, and not because the site is shifting its
philosophy on how to reach women.
"We've tried to appeal to things we think both
men and women like, which are low prices, convenience and selection," Ms.
Savitt said. "Those are very gender-agnostic marketing points. Women prefer
low prices and great selection over marketing gimmicks any day."
BOB TEDESCHI (E-Commerce Report), "Women
Are Keen to Shop Online. Merchants Are Eager to Oblige," The New York
Times, June 6, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/wmnsh0606
US couple fights Red Sea pirates (Yemeni pirates
successfully routed by middle-aged couple)
An American couple who fought off Yemenite pirates
during a Red Sea crossing in March swaggered into Ashkelon this weekend
bearing the story of their daring escape on the high seas.
Joseph L. Barry III's and Carol Martini's
journey on their private yacht began in 1999 from their quiet, north Boston
suburb. But the couple's swashbuckling skills were put to the test when they
and another American couple found themselves the victims of modern-day
pirates.
Over the past seven years, the Red Sea crossing
has become dangerous for private boats. Yemenite pirates found they could
loot and pillage the luxury yachts to their hearts content, due to a lax
Coast Guard presence in the area, say Israeli authorities.
According to what the couple told Israeli
authorities on their arrival here, Barry and Martini had teamed up with
another American couple to make the trip across the Red Sea. On the evening
of March 6, the couples were making their way toward the coast of Yemen. It
was sunset when they approached two small, wooden fishing ships commonly
used in the area. Suddenly men with guns sprung up from the boats and began
firing at them....continued in article.
Sheera Claire Frankel, "US
couple fights Red Sea pirates (Yemeni pirates successfully routed by
middle-aged couple)," Free Republic, Posted on
06/06/2005 6:45:33 AM PDT by
ToveL,
http://snipurl.com/pirat0606
Choices at Harvard
This weekend saw signs of change at Harvard
University — and evidence for why the president may well survive the
controversy over his statements about women and science.
On Friday, the university
named
Theda Skocpol as the
next dean of its Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Skocpol, the Victor
S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard, is a notable
choice for several reasons. She has been a harsh critic of Lawrence H.
Summers, the university’s president, on a number of issues, including his
management style and Harvard’s treatment of women. And Skocpol is one of the
few Harvard professors ever to win tenure and prominence at the university
after first being denied tenure and having to go through a messy and
sometimes public grievance process.
If Skocpol’s appointment is a sign that
Harvard’s leaders are reaching out to faculty critics, Summers also received
welcome news Saturday with the release of a poll of Harvard alumni
indicating that most want him to stay on as president — even if they
disagree with what he said about women....continued in article.
Scott Jaschik,
"Choices at Harvard," Inside Higher Ed, June 6, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/chhar0606
J&J's New Device For Spine
Surgery Raises Questions
Artificial Disk Aims to Help Body's Natural Movement; Some See Risk if It
Slips
'Big Money Riding on This'
It sounds like an excellent answer for persistent back pain: an artificial
disk, placed between the bones of the spine, that helps the body move
naturally. After decades of research by doctors, Johnson & Johnson became
the first to market an artificial disk in the U.S. last October, and
surgeons are flocking to a J&J training center in Cincinnati to learn how to
implant it.
Now a vigorous debate has emerged
among doctors about the durability of the J&J device and its effectiveness
compared with older "fusion" surgery, in which the bones of the spine are
fused together. Some surgeons are predicting that a wave of patients will
suffer complications over the next 10 to 15 years and need to have the
device, called Charité, removed. That's particularly worrisome because the
surgery to take it out can be dangerous -- more so, they say, than the
repairs when fusion surgery goes wrong....continued in article.
RHONDA L. RUNDLE and SCOTT HENSLEY, "J&J's
New Device For Spine Surgery Raises Questions," The Wall Street
Journal,
June 7, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/jj0607
Life on the Go Means Eating
on the Run, And a Lot of Spilling
For Detergent Makers, Food
In Car Is a Perfect Storm For New Stain Removers
On weekday mornings,
Julie Formwalt piles into the car with her two kids, Megan, 4 years old, and
Luke, 16 months. She hands them some breakfast, usually a muffin, a Pop-Tart
or a banana. Then she drops them off at day care and rushes to her job as a
real-estate lawyer in Kansas City, Mo.
There, she often pays a price for
all that convenient on-the-go food she has given little Luke. "The crumbs
and jelly on his hands end up on my shoulder, and sometimes I don't even
notice it until I'm at the office," she says.
A nation of snackers has become a
nation of stainers. Americans are eating more and more of their meals
outside the home, often while they're doing something else. The food
industry has adapted to -- and helped create -- these new eating habits.
One-handed snacks, like Yoplait's Go-Gurt and Campbell's Soup at Hand have
given more choices to people eating in the car, at soccer practice and on
the way to work. They have also created new ways to make a mess -- and new
ways of coping, both homespun and commercial.
Resourceful consumers have adopted
stain-avoidance tactics. To keep up with her hectic schedule, Ann Keeling, a
public-relations executive in Cincinnati, occasionally eats in the car. To
avoid dropping food on her clothes, she keeps a towel under the seat that
she can throw across her lap to protect her suits. If she does get a stain
on the way to a meeting, she puts some water on the towel and blots.
Thom McKee, a real-estate
developer in Marriottsville, Md., has been more careful after one bad
experience in which he showed up for a job interview with dried egg yolk on
his tie. He had tried to eat an Egg McMuffin in the car on the way. He
dabbed the stain with a napkin, but it didn't come out. Though he was
offered the job anyway, "it made the whole thing a lot more stressful, and I
ruined my tie."...continued in article.
SARAH ELLISON, "Life
on the Go Means Eating on the Run, And a Lot of Spilling," The Wall
Street Journal,
June 7, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/spill0607
A Better Robot, With Help From Roaches
Garnet Hertz, a graduate student at the
University of California, Irvine has given a roach a car.
The idea, he says, is to take a novel approach
to the problem of robotic navigation. In the past, robots have not been
particularly adroit; getting from Point A to Point B can be arduous, and
navigation systems cumbersome and complex.
Mr. Hertz, a Fulbright scholar from Canada, was
inspired by robotics pioneers like Rodney Brooks of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, who have suggested that robot intelligence should
resemble that of roaches and other insects that react quickly and
instinctively to their environment.
Mr. Hertz said the project extended work in
biological mimicry, but added: "It's a little bit of a joke. It's meant to
say, 'If all this bio-inspired stuff is so great, why don't you just use the
biology and cut to the chase?' "
He uses the Madagascar hissing cockroach,
Gromphadorhina portentosa, which can grow as big as a mouse. In the summer
of 2004, he built a three-wheeled cart that rises about knee high. Atop the
aluminum structure sits a modified computer trackball pointer, with a
Ping-Pong ball in place of the usual trackball, which is heavier.
The roach - he currently maintains a stable of
four - rides on top of the trackball. As it scampers, the robot moves in the
direction the roach would travel if it were on the ground; a Velcro patch
and harness keep it in place.
Mr. Hertz also made use of the fact that roaches
don't like light - something easily confirmed by turning on the kitchen
light at 2 a.m. In the device, the insect is enclosed by a semicircle of
lights. Individual lights turn on when the device approaches nearby objects;
in theory, the roach, in trying to avoid light, avoids the obstacles, as
well.
But biology is less predictable than technology.
Sometimes a roach appears perfectly happy to sit motionless on the ball for
minutes at a time. Some roaches ignore the lights. And once in a while some
of them, he believes, seem to enjoy bumping the cart into walls.
Mr. Hertz orders his roaches online and feeds
them organic lettuce and canned dog food.
It is not the first time that an artist has
combined the biological with the mechanical. But Mr. Hertz's roaches seem to
have an eerie appeal, and they have become geek heroes. He has displayed the
roachmobile at technology conferences, and his roaches have been written up
in a new do-it-yourself tech magazine, Make.
He said that Robo-roach was conceived as a
project for his master's in fine arts thesis. He calls it "dialogical," a
term for works created to spark discussion.
In an unpublished essay, Mr. Hertz said he hoped
the project would inspire "discussion about the biological versus
computational, fears about technology and nature, a future filled with
biohybrid robots, and a recollection of the narrative of the cyborg."
As opposed to, simply, "Eeew."
JOHN SCHWARTZ "A Better Robot, With Help From Roaches," The New
York Times, June 7, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/roborch0607
Microsoft Ordered to Pay Inventor $8.9 Million in Patent Case
Microsoft was told by
a jury to pay a Guatemalan inventor $8.96 million for infringing a patent
that links its Access and Excel programs through a single spreadsheet.
The jury, in United States District Court in
Santa Ana, Calif., ruled that Microsoft had used technology patented by
Carlos Amado in some versions of Access, said Vincent Belusko, a lawyer for
Mr. Amado.
A Microsoft spokeswoman, Stacy Drake, said the
company was reviewing the verdict and considering an appeal.
"While today's verdict is disappointing, we are
pleased that the jury rejected Mr. Amado's large damage claims," Ms. Drake
said. "We continue to contend there was no infringement of any kind."
The verdict covers damages from March 1997
through July 31, 2003, Mr. Belusko said. Judge David Carter will next
determine whether Microsoft owes further damages from Aug. 1, 2003, to the
present. Mr. Amado had sought as much as $400 million.
Mr. Amado developed the program in 1990 and
approached Microsoft to sell the technology to the company in 1992.
Microsoft declined, and in 1995 came out with the application in its
software programs, Mr. Belusko said.
By BLOOMBERG NEWS, "Microsoft
Ordered to Pay Inventor $8.9 Million in Patent Case," The New York Times,
http://snipurl.com/ptcse0607
Stalking a Killer That Lurks a Few Feet Offshore
When people think about natural hazards, they
usually think about tornadoes or hurricanes or earthquakes. But there is
another natural hazard that takes more lives in an average year in the
United States than any of those - rip currents.
Each year in American waters, rip currents pull
about 100 panicked swimmers to their deaths. According to the United States
Lifesaving Association, lifeguards pull out at least 70,000 Americans from
the surf each year, 80 percent from rip currents....continued in article.
CORNELIA DEAN "Stalking a Killer That Lurks a Few Feet Offshore,"
The New York Times,
http://snipurl.com/tides0607
Al Gore Receives Webby Award for Lifetime Achievement
Webby winners last
night included Tyler Morgan, 19, of Amarillo, Tex. for best personal Web
site and former Vice President Al Gore, who may not have invented the
Internet but did receive a lifetime achievement award.
Five Words of Wisdom Each From the Web's Winning
Sites
One of the more charming idiosyncrasies of the
Webby Awards, the annual awards for achievement in Web creation, is that
recipients get five words, and five words only, to make their acceptance
speeches.
So after a night full of award innuendos and
one-line haiku at Gotham Hall in Manhattan, the 550 people in attendance
were wondering how Al Gore, the former vice president, would respond to his
lifetime achievement award.
He did not disappoint.
"Please don't recount this vote," he said. The
place went nuts....continued in article.
DAVID CARR "Al Gore Receives Webby Award for Lifetime
Achievement," Published: June 7, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/alg0607
Some Immigrants Are Offering Social Security Numbers for Rent
TLALCHAPA, Mexico - Gerardo Luviano is looking
for somebody to rent his Social Security number.
Mr. Luviano, 39, obtained legal residence in the
United States almost 20 years ago. But these days, back in Mexico, teaching
beekeeping at the local high school in this hot, dusty town in the
southwestern part of the country, Mr. Luviano is not using his Social
Security number. So he is looking for an illegal immigrant in the United
States to use it for him - providing a little cash along the way.
"I've almost managed to contact somebody to lend
my number to," Mr. Luviano said. "My brother in California has a friend who
has crops and has people that need one."
Mr. Luviano's pending transaction is merely a
blip in a shadowy yet vibrant underground market. Virtually undetected by
American authorities, operating below the radar in immigrant communities
from coast to coast, a secondary trade in identities has emerged straddling
both sides of the Mexico-United States border....continued in article.
EDUARDO PORTER "Some Immigrants Are Offering Social Security Numbers
for Rent," The New York Times, June 7, 2005,
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/07/business/07immigrant.html
Johnson's Watergate (NRO)
Interesting read I thought we'd all enjoy. LBJ
makes Nixon look like a saint. Johnson’s “Watergate” LBJ vs. Goldwater. By
Lee Edwards
It was a political scandal of unprecedented
proportions: the deliberate, systematic, and illegal misuse of the FBI and
the CIA by the White House in a presidential campaign. The massive black-bag
operations, bordering on the unconstitutional and therefore calling for
impeachment, were personally approved by the president. They included
planting a CIA spy in his opponent's campaign committee, wiretaps on his
opponent's top political aides, illegal FBI checks, and the bugging of his
opponent's campaign airplane.
The president? Lyndon B. Johnson. The target?
Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, the 1964 Republican presidential
candidate....continued in article.
slowhand520 "Johnson's
Watergate," Free Republic, June 7, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/joh0607
Pitt Drops Sponsorship of Semester at Sea
The University of Pittsburgh dropped its
sponsorship of the Semester at Sea program, citing concerns about safety
months after startled students were tossed around by a huge wave in the
Pacific.
The nonprofit Institute for Shipboard Education,
which operates the program, responded with a lawsuit against the university
Friday, saying the pullout violates Pitt's contract and may cause
irreparable harm to the floating, study-abroad program.
In January, a 50-foot wave temporarily disabled
a Semester at Sea ship, injuring two crew members and tossing hundreds of
people around. The ship, the Explorer, had 990 people aboard, including
nearly 700 students. It later limped into Honolulu Harbor for
repairs...continued in article.
Associated Press, "Pitt Drops Sponsorship of Semester at Sea,"
ABC News, June 7, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/sas0607
Toshiba Develops Recordable High-Def DVDs
Toshiba Says It Has Developed the Technology
to Mass-Produce Recordable High-Definition DVDs
Japan's Toshiba Corp. said Wednesday that it has developed the technology to
mass-produce recordable high-definition DVDs.
The advance is the latest step in a heated
global race to establish a world standard for the next-generation of optical
disks, which are expected to offer sharper images than current DVDs.
Toshiba said the new technology, developed
jointly with Mitsubishi Kagaku Media Co. and Hayashibara Biochemical
Laboratories Inc., will enable the manufacture of single-recording HD-DVD
disks with 15-gigabyte storage capacity.
Disc manufacturers, currently producing
recordable DVD disks, will only have to make minor modifications to be able
to produce the new higher-definition kind, Toshiba said.
Optical disc makers Hitachi Maxell Ltd. and
Mitsubishi Kagaku said they will market the new HD-DVD-R discs next spring,
when Toshiba plans to launch HD-DVD recorders.
In the battle for a high-definition successor to
DVDs, there are two technologies competing to become the world standard.
Toshiba leads a group that backs the HD-DVD
format, while Sony Corp. leads a rival group promoting the Blu-ray Disc
format.
Blu-ray have more capacity with 50 gigabytes
compared to 30 gigabytes for HD-DVD read-only disks, but proponents of
HD-DVD say their format is cheaper to make because the production method is
similar to current DVDs.
The Associated Press, "Toshiba Develops Recordable High-Def
DVDs," ABC News, June 8, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/hidef0608
After Huge Wave, University
Withdraws From Semester at Sea
The
University of Pittsburgh dropped its sponsorship of the Semester at Sea
program, citing concerns about safety, months after students were tossed
around by a huge wave in the Pacific Ocean.
The nonprofit Institute for
Shipboard Education, which operates the program, responded with a suit
against the university, saying the pullout violates the school's contract
and may cause irreparable harm to the study-abroad program.
In January, a 50-foot wave
temporarily disabled the Semester at Sea ship Explorer, injuring two crew
members and tossing hundreds of people around. The ship had 990 people
aboard, including nearly 700 students. It later limped into Honolulu Harbor
for repairs.
In a letter to John Tymitz, the
institute's chief executive, University of Pittsburgh Provost James Maher
named several factors, including unresolved issues regarding the deaths of
five participants in a bus accident during an India trip in 1996.
Mr. Maher also wrote that the
university was concerned with the ship used in the winter voyage and the
program's decision to visit Kenya this year despite a State Department
travel advisory.
"We found ourselves in the
position of a frustrated spouse who has tried to keep the marriage going but
in the end has to accept that it's over," university spokesman Robert Hill
said.
Mr. Tymitz didn't immediately
return a call for comment yesterday.
Students from hundreds of colleges
attend Semester at Sea, but the program has been sponsored by the University
of Pittsburgh for more than 20 years, and the Institute for Shipboard
Education is based there.
The program was founded in
California in 1963 as the University of the Seven Seas.
Copyright © 2005 Associated Press, "After
Huge Wave, University Withdraws From Semester at Sea," The Wall
Street Journal,
June 8, 2005; Page D12,
http://snipurl.com/wave0608
Student discovers calculator flaw
Calculators recalled by Texas Instruments
Texas
Instruments is replacing thousands of calculators issued to students in
Virginia after a sixth-grader discovered that pressing a certain two keys
converts decimals into fractions.
That would have given students an unfair
advantage on Virginia's standardized tests, which require youngsters to know
how to make such conversions with pencil and paper.
At the request of the state education department
two years ago, Texas Instruments had disabled the decimal-to-fraction key
and left it blank on calculators intended for middle school students.
But in January, Dakota Brown, a 12-year-old at
Carver Middle School in suburban Richmond's Chesterfield County, figured out
that by pressing two other keys on his state-approved TI-30 Xa SE VA, he
could change decimals into fractions anyway.
"His fellow students were so proud of him and
congratulatory. They thought it was really, really cool. They didn't call
him a nerd or anything," said Michael Bolling, a school official in
Chesterfield County. The county had more than 11,000 of the calculators
recalled.
Texas Instruments recalled the calculators and
is replacing them. TI had no immediate comment Tuesday.
Initial estimates the company provided the state
indicated 160,000 calculators were to be replaced, but the exact number is
unclear, education department officials said,
Calls to the boy's school and his parents to
arrange an interview with the youngster were not immediately returned. But
Chesterfield County school officials held a low-key ceremony to honor him,
and Texas Instruments sent him a graphing calculator, "which he loved," said
Lois Williams, the state administrator in charge of middle-school math.
Copyright 2005 The
Associated Press. "Student discovers calculator flaw,"
CNN.com, June 8, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/calc0608
Airliner dodges driver at
Cyprus airport
Cyprus
international airport operations were disrupted when a man drove a car under
parked planes and forced a taxiing airliner to change course to avoid a
collision, authorities said.
A chase to catch the driver, identified as a 30-year-old Greek,
disrupted airport traffic on Wednesday night.
Control tower workers raised the alarm after seeing a car speeding
under parked aircraft at Larnaca airport on Cyprus's southeast coast.
A Cyprus Airways jet which had just landed had to change course to
avoid collision. "The car was heading straight for us," the pilot said.
The man was being questioned by police, who suspect he was fleeing
after being caught taking biscuits from a nearby bakery.
Reuters, "Airliner
dodges driver at Cyprus airport," IWon News, June 9, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/alcr0609
You Don't Bother Me, Black
Fly, Say Fans Of 'Jaws on Wings'
They have been called "winged
assassins," "kamikaze wretches" and "jaws on wings." Their bites can cause
bloody welts, violent allergies, and fever with swollen lymph nodes, nausea
and vomiting.
But in this Vermont village of
about 400, black flies are a cause for celebration. Adamant's annual Black
Fly Festival, held in early May in anticipation of the bugs' emergence,
featured antenna-wearing children, a poet reading his verse about a "Taoist
mountain recluse" smashing "the little black fly into the hairs on his dirty
brown arm," and a "black-fly pie" baking contest. The winning entry had
blood-red strawberry filling, a fly-mimicking sprinkling of chocolate chips,
and pink sauce that looked like calamine lotion....continued in article.
RACHEL ZIMMERMAN, "You
Don't Bother Me, Black Fly, Say Fans Of 'Jaws on Wings'," The Wall
Street Journal,
June 9, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/blkfly0609
Grant Thornton Battles Its
Image
No. 5
Accounting Firm Struggles To Attract Major Audit Clients, Despite
Misfortunes of Big Four
For
the 373 partners of Grant Thornton LLP, the U.S.'s No. 5 accounting firm by
revenue, these should be heady times. Revenue climbed about 30% last year to
$635 million, and the firm picked up more than 1,000 new clients.
Only one thing is missing: large,
publicly held audit clients. For 2004, Grant Thornton served as the
independent auditor for just one Fortune 500 company, W.W. Grainger
Inc. That's down from two during 2003, before Countrywide Financial
Corp. switched to KPMG LLP, the smallest of the Big Four with $4.1 billion
of revenue. Then, in March, Grant Thornton Chief Executive Officer Ed
Nusbaum got the bad news. Grainger was switching to Ernst & Young LLP....continued
in article.
DIYA GULLAPALLI, "Grant
Thornton Battles Its Image," The Wall Street Journal,
June 9, 2005; Page C1,
http://snipurl.com/grnt0609
The Scramble to Protect Personal Data
Perhaps more than most corporations,
Citigroup knows the
perils of moving personal data.
In February last year, a magnetic tape with
information on about 120,000 Japanese customers of its Citibank division
disappeared while being shipped by truck from a data management center in
Singapore. The tape held names, addresses, account numbers and balances. It
has never turned up.
And this week the company revealed that it had
happened again - this time the loss of an entire box of tapes in the care of
the
United Parcel Service,
with personal information on nearly four million American
customers....continued in article.
TOM ZELLER Jr., "The Scramble to Protect Personal Data," The New
York Times, June 9, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/prtdta0609
Another One Bites the Dust
Wayne State University’s Board of Governor’s voted unanimously Wednesday to
close the College of
Urban, Labor and Metroplitan Affairs — a move that critics say
symbolizes a national trend of universities disengaging from low-income
students.
The University of Minnesota is expected later this week to vote eliminate
a college that helps non-traditional students. And other urban institutions,
like Temple University and the University of Cincinnati, have recently
raised admissions standards that were once quite welcoming to students in
local areas...continued in article.
David Epstein
"Another One Bites the Dust," Inside Higher Ed, June 9, 2005,
http://snipurl.com/dst0609
Bob Jensen's June 14, 2005 Tidbits
Music: White Mountains ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/whitemtn.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
To laugh often and love much; to win the respect
of intelligent persons and the affection of children; to earn the
approbation of honest citizens and endure the betrayal of false friends; to
appreciate beauty; to find the best in others; to give of one's self; to
leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or
a redeemed social condition; to have played and laughed with enthusiasm and
sung with exultation; to know even one life has breathed easier because you
have lived - this is to have succeeded.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Fly over the earth: Choose your location
Forwarded by Paula
TerraFly
http://terrafly.fiu.edu/
TerraFly changes the way you view your world.
Simply enter an address, and our system will put you at the controls of
a bird's view aerial imagery to explore your digital earth.
Milton Friedman at Age 92
Friedman calls Social Security, created by President Franklin Roosevelt in
1935, a Ponzi game
"Friedman's 'heresy' hits mainstream Private Social Security accounts
were his idea," by Carolyn Lochhead, San Francisco Chronicle, June 5, 2005
---
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/06/05/ING9QD1E5Q1.DTL
San Francisco seems an unlikely home for the
man who in 1962 first proposed the privatization of Social Security.
Asked why he dwells in liberalism's den, Milton
Friedman, 92, the Nobel laureate economist and father of modern
conservatism, didn't skip a beat.
"Not much competition here," he quipped.
"The people I see in the Safeway don't go
around yelling, 'I'm a left wing Democrat,' even if they are," he said.
"This is a very nice city to live in."
Living atop Nob Hill for the past 28 years with
his wife and collaborator, Rose, who fell in love with the city as a
young woman, Friedman is considered perhaps the most influential
economist since John Maynard Keynes.
Keynes, the British economist whose ideas
propelled the New Deal, was to Republicans what Friedman, son of poor
Jewish Brooklyn immigrants from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, is to
Democrats: a font of heresy.
It was Friedman who in 1962, with the
publication of "Capitalism and Freedom," first proposed the abolition of
Social Security, not because it was going bankrupt, but because he
considered it immoral.
"We may wish to help poor people," he wrote.
"Is there any justification for helping people whether they are poor or
not because they happen to be a certain age?"
President Bush's proposal to incorporate
private accounts in the giant retirement program is easily traced to
Friedman.
"He's the originator of it and all the
discussion can be traced back to him," said the Cato Institute's Michael
Tanner, a leading advocate of partial privatization.
"I've always been opposed to Social Security,"
Friedman said in a recent interview at his home in San Francisco. "I
think it's a very unethical program. "
Friedman's work clearly influenced Harvard
economist Martin Feldstein, now the chief intellectual force behind
privatization, said Thomas Saving, a recent Social Security trustee.
Feldstein, often mentioned as a likely candidate to replace Federal
Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, cites Friedman in his article on the
subject in the American Economic Review.
"He's the guy who got people asking the
question," Saving said, "because at the time it was a question you
couldn't ask."
The late Arizona Republican Sen. Barry
Goldwater, whom Friedman advised, found that out in 1964 when he
suggested during his presidential campaign that Social Security be made
voluntary.
Goldwater was pilloried, not only by editorial
pages but his own party. He lost in a landslide to Democratic President
Lyndon Johnson, who went on to create Medicare, the big health care
program for the elderly, in 1965.
Friedman calls Social Security, created by
President Franklin Roosevelt in 1935, a Ponzi game.
Charles Ponzi was the 1920s Boston swindler who
collected money from "investors" to whom he paid out large "profits"
from the proceeds of later investors. The scheme inevitably collapses
when there are not enough new entrants to pay earlier ones.
That Social Security operates on a similar
basis is not really in dispute. Paul Samuelson, who won his Nobel Prize
in economics six years before Friedman and shared a Newsweek column with
him in the 1960s, called Social Security "a Ponzi scheme that works."
"The beauty about social insurance is that it
is actuarially unsound," Samuelson wrote in an oft-quoted 1967 column.
"Everyone who reaches retirement age is given benefit privileges that
far exceed anything he has paid in ... A growing nation is the greatest
Ponzi game ever contrived."
Today, 38 years after Samuelson wrote this, the
number of people collecting benefits is about to rise steeply as Baby
Boomers retire, reversing the flow of the system's finances. And it is
Friedman's intellectual framework that now reigns at the White House.
"Everybody goes around talking about the
problems created by the declining number of workers per retiree," he
said. "How come life insurance companies aren't in any problem?"
The question is quintessential Friedman:
simple, accessible and formidable.
Life insurance companies take premium payments
and invest them in factories and buildings and other income-producing
assets, Friedman said. These accumulate in a growing fund that can then
pay benefits. Social Security, by contrast, operates pay-as-you-go,
collecting payroll taxes from workers that immediately go to pay
retirees.
The biggest misconception about the program, he
argues, is that workers believe it works like insurance, with the
government depositing taxes in a trust fund.
"I've always thought it disgraceful that the
government should be essentially lying about what it was doing," he
said.
"How did you ever get the Democrats, who
supposedly were in favor of progressive taxation, to pass a tax that is
biased against low-income people - - which is on income up to a maximum
and no more?" he asked, referring to the $90,000 ceiling on which Social
Security taxes are levied. "Only by clothing it in this idea that it's
not really a tax, it's an insurance payment."
Asked why, if Social Security is so terrible,
it is the most popular government program in American history, Friedman
replied, "Well, because why does a Ponzi game work? It's easy to
understand why it's popular. So far, on the average, retirees have
gotten more out of the system than they put into it. "
What about the fact that Social Security has
reduced poverty among the elderly?
"Well," he replied, "what it has done is
transfer a lot of income from the young to the old. It is certainly true
it has made the old people of the United States the best treated old
people in the world."
But why is that a bad thing? "Oh," he replied.
"It's not a bad thing for them, but what about the young?"
Friedman supported Bush's first-term candidacy,
but he is more accurately libertarian than conservative and not a
reliable Bush ally.
Progress in his goal of rolling back the role
of government, he said, is "being greatly threatened, unfortunately, by
this notion that the U.S. has a mission to promote democracy around the
world," a big Bush objective.
"War is a friend of the state," Friedman said.
It is always expensive, requiring higher taxes, and, "In time of war,
government will take powers and do things that it would not ordinarily
do."
He also said it was no coincidence that budget
surpluses appeared during the Clinton administration, when a Democratic
president faced a Republican Congress.
"There were no big spending programs during the
Clinton administration," he said. "As a result, government spending
tended to stay down, the economy grew like mad, taxes went up, spending
did not, and lo and behold, the deficit was turned into a surplus."
The problem now, he said, is that Republicans
control both ends of Washington.
"There's no question if we're holding down
spending, a Democratic president and a Republican House and Senate is
the proper combination."
He calls himself an innate optimist, despite
the unpopularity of many of his ideas.
When he moved to San Francisco in the 1970s,
the city was debating rent control, he recalled. So he wrote a letter to
The Chronicle saying, "Anybody who has examined the evidence about the
effects of rent control, and still votes for it, is either a knave or a
fool."
What happened? "They immediately passed it," he
laughed.
Microsoft CEO Warns of Internet Dangers
Computer users, beware. The head of the world's
largest software company worries that consumers who make Internet purchases
have become too complacent about the risks of financial fraud and stolen
identity. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said in an interview with The
Associated Press that a calm period without significant Internet attacks has
lulled computer users, even older Web surfers who traditionally have been
more anxious than teenagers about their online safety.
Ted Bridis, "Microsoft CEO Warns of Internet Dangers," The Washington Post,
June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/09/AR2005060901362.html?referrer=email
Temples in Europe preceded those in Egypt by 2,000 years
More than 150 large temples, constructed between
4800 BCE and 4600 BCE, have been unearthed in fields and cities in Germany,
Austria and Slovakia, predating the pyramids in Egypt by about 2000 years,
the newspaper revealed on Friday.
"Europe's oldest civilisation is found," Aljazeera, June 11, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/D005B986-02DF-4D20-8846-C9CD580710FD.htm
"Modelling the brain: Grey matter, blue matter," The Economist,
June 9, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=4054975
In a real brain, a neocortical column is a
cylindrical element about a third of a millimetre in diameter and three
millimetres long, containing some 10,000 nerve cells. It is these
columns, arranged side by side like the cells of a honeycomb, which make
up the famous “grey matter” that has become a shorthand for human
intelligence. The Blue Gene/L supercomputer that will be used for the
simulation consists of enough independent processors for each to be
programmed to emulate an individual nerve cell in a column.
The EPFL's contribution to the Blue Brain
Project, as it has inevitably been dubbed, will be to create a digital
description of how the columns behave. Its Brain Mind Institute has what
is generally regarded as the world's most extensive set of data on the
machinations of the neocortex—the columns' natural habitat and the part
of the brain responsible for learning, memory, language and complex
thought. This database will provide the raw material for the simulation.
Biologists and computer scientists will then collaborate to connect the
artificial nerve cells up in a way that mimics nature. They will do so
by assigning electrical properties to them, and telling them how to
communicate with each other and how they should modify their connections
with one another depending on their activity.
That will be no mean feat. Even a single nerve
cell is complicated, not least because each one has about 10,000
connections with others. And nerve cells come in great variety—relying,
for example, on different chemical transmitters to carry messages across
those connections. Eventually, however, a digital representation of an
entire column should emerge.
Continued in article
An evolutionary speculation on why men kill and abuse
Reply to a negative book review by David M. Buss Professor, Head Individual
Differences and Evolutionary Psychology Department of Psychology University
of Texas Austin, Texas
Contrary to Ms. Begley's assertions, the book
in no way seeks "a 'scientific' validation for killing women." Rather, the
book proposes an evolution-based theory of why people kill in a variety of
circumstances, including to prevent being killed, to protect one's family
from injury, rape or death, to eliminate a sexual rival, to secure sexual
access to a competitor's mate and to prevent an interloper from poaching on
one's own mate. The book's theory is based on sound evolutionary biology,
anchored in the clear logic of reproductive competition. Adaptations for
within-species killing exist in hundreds of other species, and there is no
reason to believe that humans are exempt.
"Murder Most Foul . . . and Evolutionary," The Wall Street
Journal, June 10, 2005; Page A9 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111837187163756230,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
The controversial book by David M. Bass is entitled The Murderer Next
Door: Why the Mind Is Designed to Kill by David Buss ---
http://www.socioweb.com/sociology-books/book/1594200432/
The book has a negative review by
Sharon Begley ("Science Journal:
Theory Men Are Wired to Kill Straying Mates Is Offensive and Wrong,"
Marketplace, May 20)
Murdering Women For "Honor"
Today we are witnessing the globalization of honor
killing, as the West has become the perpetual scene of immigrant Arab women
being murdered by their immigrant families. A distinguished panel joins us
today to discuss what causes this violence against women, how it is directly
connected to the terror war, and why the Western Left is so deafeningly
silent about a mass crime that violates one of its supposed sacred values .
. .
Jamie Glazov, "Symposium: Murdering Women For 'Honor',"
FrontPageMagazine.com, June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=18370
It's becoming a Wiki World: Write and re-write editorials in the
LA Times
This week, the newspaper, will introduce an online
feature called "wikitorials," as a way for readers to engage in an online
dialogue with the paper. The model is based on "Wikipedia," the Web's
free-content encyclopedia that is edited by online contributors. "We'll have
some editorials where you can go online and edit an editorial to your
satisfaction," Mr. Martinez said. "We are going to do that with selected
editorials initially. We don't know how this is going to turn out. It's all
about finding new ways to allow readers to interact with us in the age of
the Web."
Alicia C. Shepard, "Upheaval on Los Angeles Times Editorial Pages," The
New York Times, June 13, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/13/business/media/13lat.html?
By ALICIA C. SHEPARD Published: June 13, 2005
Tech trivia from The Washington Post, June 13, 2005
Internet media company Yahoo will quit
charging fees for which service on its U.S. site?
A.
Auctions
B.
Maps
C.
Personal Ads
D.
Webmail
Spotted: a new trend called plagio-riffing
Students are growing lazier about the whole process
of copying, not even bothering to change fonts in a cut-and-paste excerpt or
otherwise disguise their tracks. When asked why he inserted an entire page
printed in Black Forest Gothic in a paper written in Courier, a student in
freshman composition expressed surprise: “If you start changing things,
that’s cheating, right?” The path of least resistance continues, often
refreshingly low-tech. A Psychology 200 instructor reported a student
handing in a Xerox of an article with the author’s name whited out and her
own inserted. “I did the best I could,” confessed the student. “I didn’t
have my laptop with me, and I was in a hurry.” . . .
Spotted: a new trend
called plagio-riffing, where students get together and mix and match five or
more papers into one by sampling and lifting choice paragraphs to the beat
of George Harrison’s “My Sweet Lord” (plagiarized from “He’s So Fine”).
David Galef, "Report from the Academic Committee on Plagiarism," Inside
Higher Ed, June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/10/galef
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Designed by real scientists
The National Academies' new website for educators
is intended to help hinder religious activists who want U.S. schools to
downplay Darwin.
Amit Asaravala, "Group Creates Pro-Evolution Site," Wired News, June
10, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,67813,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_6
The site is at
http://nationalacademies.org/evolution/
Business schools put their SOX on
Of course, not everyone has been so happy with
Sarbanes-Oxley. Companies have complained that they have spent millions of
dollars meeting the law's requirements. In March, Financial Executives
International, a trade association for chief financial officers and other
executives, estimated that the legislation cost big companies an average of
$4.36 million, a 39 percent increase from the group's previous estimate in
July 2004. The trade association's voluntary survey included 217 companies
with average revenue of $5 billion a year. But there is a swath of the
Washington area economy that has benefited from the new law. They include
business schools, such as George Mason University's, which has revamped its
curriculum and seen student interest in accounting courses increase, as well
as software and service companies like Approva and Consul.
Elissa Silverman, "Reining In Risk Turns Into Big Business: Sarbanes-Oxley
Creates Winners," The Washington Post, June 13, 2005; Page D01 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/12/AR2005061201010.html?referrer=email
For the love of research
SRI is known in Silicon Valley mostly as the
birthplace of the mouse -- as far as it's known at all. Most people don't
know that SRI International also developed the first system to
electronically sort checks. It created the first fax machine. And it has
been responsible for major innovations in everything from less invasive
surgery to robotics. The history of the venerable Silicon Valley research
institute has been captured in a book called ``A Heritage of Innovation:
SRI's First Half Century,'' just published by SRI. Written by former
computer science researcher Don Nielson, the book describes many of the
accomplishments -- and some of the challenges -- of the former Stanford
Research Institute, one of the last remaining pure research organizations in
the United States.
Therese Poletti, "For the love of research: EX-SRI COMPUTER SCIENTIST
TELLS STORY OF LOW-PROFILE INSTITUTE, Mercury News, June 9, 2005 ---
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/local/11853303.htm
He who Laffers last, laughs last
"Real Tax Cuts Have Curves," by Stephen Moore, The Wall Street Journal,
June 13, 2005; Page A13 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111862100030657555,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Now we have overpowering confirming evidence
from the Bush tax cuts of May 2003. The jewel of the Bush economic plan
was the reduction in tax rates on dividends from 39.6% to 15% and on
capital gains from 20% to 15%. These sharp cuts in the double tax on
capital investment were intended to reverse the 2000-01 stock market
crash, which had liquidated some $6 trillion in American household
wealth, and to inspire a revival in business capital investment, which
had also collapsed during the recession. The tax cuts were narrowly
enacted despite the usual indignant primal screams from the greed and
envy lobby about "tax cuts for the super rich."
Last week the Congressional Budget Office
released its latest report on tax revenue collections. The numbers are
an eye-popping vindication of the Laffer Curve and the Bush tax cut's
real economic value. Federal tax revenues have surged in the first eight
months of this fiscal year by $187 billion. This represents a 15.4% rise
in federal tax receipts over 2004. Individual and corporate income tax
receipts have exploded like a cap let off a geyser, up 30% in the two
years since the tax cut. Once again, tax rate cuts have created a
virtuous chain reaction of higher economic growth, more jobs, higher
corporate profits, and finally more tax receipts.
This Laffer Curve effect has also created a
revenue windfall for states and cities. As the economic expansion has
plowed forward, and in some regions of the country accelerated, state
tax receipts have climbed 7.5% this year already. Perhaps the most
remarkable story from around the nation comes from the perpetually
indebted New York City, which suddenly finds itself more than $3 billion
IN SURPLUS thanks to an unexpected gush in revenues. Many of President
Bush's critics foolishly predicted that states and localities would be
victims of the Bush tax cut gamble.
Continued in the article
Anti-euro backlash is ricocheting up
In Italy, an anti-euro backlash is ricocheting up
and down the peninsula as the country sinks deeper into a recession.
Consumers, businesspeople and some politicians now bemoan a currency they
claim has left them poorer and less competitive. Earlier this month, the
welfare minister, Roberto Maroni, called for a referendum to bring back the
lira. The daily newspaper of his party, the Northern League, has just begun
rendering prices in euros and lira in its news columns, even though the lira
no longer exists. The euro-bashing isn't confined to Italy. A poll for Stern
magazine this month found that 56% of Germans want the mark back. The
mounting dissatisfaction is another blow to the authority of the EU. The
25-member union was pitched into confusion two weeks ago by the rejection by
French and Dutch voters of a proposed new constitution for the union.
Underpinning those votes and the grousing over the euro are deep anxieties
about slow growth, high unemployment and the future of Europe's generous
welfare states.
Gabriel Kahn and Marcus Walker, "With Italy in the Doldrums, Many Point
Fingers at the Euro," The Wall Street Journal, June 13, 2005; Page
A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111861330098357388,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
In Canada you can't get pain relief even if you can afford to pay for
it privately --- Until now
Let's hope Hillary Clinton and Ted Kennedy were
sitting down when they heard the news of the latest bombshell Supreme Court
ruling. From the Supreme Court of Canada, that is. That high court issued an
opinion last Thursday saying, in effect, that Canada's vaunted public
health-care system produces intolerable inequality. Call it the hip that
changed health-care history. When George Zeliotis of Quebec was told in 1997
that he would have to wait a year for a replacement for his painful,
arthritic hip, he did what every Canadian who's been put on a waiting list
does: He got mad. He got even madder when he learned it was against the law
to pay for a replacement privately. But instead of heading south to a
hospital in Boston or Cleveland, as many Canadians already do, he teamed up
to file a lawsuit with Jacques Chaoulli, a Montreal doctor. The duo lost in
two provincial courts before their win last week. The court's decision
strikes down a Quebec law banning private medical insurance and is bound to
upend similar laws in other provinces. Canada is the only nation other than
Cuba and North Korea that bans private health insurance, according to Sally
Pipes, head of the Pacific Research Institute in San Francisco and author of
a recent book on Canada's health-care system
"Unsocialized Medicine A landmark ruling exposes Canada's health-care
inequity," Opinion Journal, June 13, 2005 ---
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110006813
The World of Sharks ---
http://www.mbayaq.org/efc/sharks.asp
A great historical Website from the Maine Historical Society
Once you have visited Maine, it is most certainly
not a place that you will soon forget. This website is designed to make sure
longtime residents and visitors alike will not forget this tranquil state,
as it brings together a very wide range of historical documents and memories
from around the state. The site itself was created by the Maine Historical
Society, and is supported by monies from the Institute of Museum and Library
Services and several other partners. Within the site, visitors can search
for historical items and documents, view thematic online exhibits, and learn
about how the site may be used effectively in classroom settings. One
particularly fine exhibit is the one that offers some visual documentation
of rural Aroostook County around the year 1900. In this exhibit, visitors
can experience the dense forests and rugged terrain that dominate the
landscape of this part of Maine.
The Scout Report, January 10, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ScoutMaine
The site is at
http://www.mainememory.net/
Bob Jensen's threads on history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Innovative applications of Google maps
Tracking sexual predators in Florida. Guiding
travelers to the cheapest gas nationwide. Pinpointing $1,500 studio
apartments for rent in Manhattan. Geeks, tinkerers and innovators are
crashing the Google party, having discovered how to tinker with the search
engine's mapping service to graphically illustrate vital information that
might otherwise be ignored, overlooked or not perceived as clearly. "It's
such a beautiful way to look at what could be a dense amount of
information," said Tara Calishain, editor of Research Buzz and co-author of
"Google Hacks," a book that offers tips on how to get the most out of the
Web's most popular search engine. Yahoo and other sites also offer maps, but
Google's four-month-old mapping service is more easily accessible and
manipulated by outsiders, the tinkerers say. As it turns out, Google charts
each point on its maps by latitude and longitude - that's how Google can
produce.
"Google Maps Make Demographics Come Alive," Forbes, June 8, 2005 ---
http://www.forbes.com/technology/ebusiness/feeds/ap/2005/06/08/ap2083551.html
Also see
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/ap/ap_060905.asp?trk=nl
Google Maps (including satellite photo options) are at
http://maps.google.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on maps are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#Travel
Institute of Chicago presents Art Explorer
An early innovator in the digitization of artwork
(its CD of art images "With Open Eyes" was published in 1995), the Art
Institute of Chicago presents Art Explorer, an interactive website where
visitors can search for art, save selections into scrapbooks with notes, and
share the scrapbooks with friends and students. Art Explorer focuses on the
Art Institute's Impressionist and Postimpressionist collections, and
includes original artworks, as well as additional resources, including
texts, video clips, artist biographies, activities, and games. For example,
a search on the artist Georges Seurat retrieves eight artworks, and 42
resources, including a biographical text about Camille Pissaro, one of
Seurat's contemporaries, a classroom exercise on color mixing based on
Seurat's pointillist style, and a Postimpressionist bibliography, compiled
by the Art Institute's Museum Education Department. The scrapbook at
http://www.artic.edu/artexplorer/viewbook.php?vbook=rylnqtvhyaqm is based on
this search.
The Scout Report, January 10, 2005 ---
http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/ScoutReport/2005/scout-050610-geninterest.php#2
The site is at
http://www.artic.edu/artexplorer/
Bob Jensen's threads on art museums are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Roadcasting: A Potential Mesh Network Killer App
The concept was created by a team of five students
at Carnegie Mellon University. Their Human-Computer Interaction Institute
Masters Program project, which was sponsored by General Motors, according to
a company spokeswoman, combines three hot areas: ad hoc (mesh) computer
networks, personalized digital music, and open-source software development.
While the hardware elements -- the network devices, the touch-screen
interface, and the stereo component -- have yet to be created, the working
software application is currently being picked over by open-source
enthusiasts around the world. The most straightforward use for the software
enables people to create their own personal radio stations -- playlists --
and store them on an in-car stereo hard drive. The real innovation, though,
comes from what happens once a playlist is created. While a driver is
listening to music from his or her choices, the songs will be broadcast and
available for reception by any other car with a roadcast-equipped car
stereo. So, if a driver gets bored with a personal playlist, the software's
collaborative filtering capabilities will automatically scan the airwaves
looking for other roadcast stations that match the driver's stated
preferences, and return any matching available stations. Listeners can
search by bands, genres, and song titles, and skip through other users'
radio stations to find music they want to hear.
Eric Hellweg, "Roadcasting: A Potential Mesh Network Killer App," MIT's
Technology Review, June 10, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/articles/05/06/wo/wo_061005hellweg.asp?trk=nl
Ancient Versus Modern Arms Control Agreements
The tapestry depicts elephants striding among Roman
legionnaires and their foes. The placard explains, "One of the best-known
ancient arms control agreements was negotiated between Rome and Carthage
following Scipio Africanus's victory over Hannibal in the Battle of Zama in
202 B.C. This treaty required the Carthaginians to surrender all their war
elephants." Museum visitors, then, are told that thermonuclear bombs and the
battle elephants from the classical world are analogous examples of weapons
systems that were regulated by the mutual agreement of warring groups.
"Society has always placed limits on the ability of one side to wage war on
another," the sign claims.
Mark Williams, "On Display: the Unthinkable," MIT's Technology Magazine,
July 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/articles/05/07/issue/review_display.asp?trk=nl
Finally a corporate board acts to end a fraud
The abrupt notice of termination given last week to
the head of MassMutual Financial Group, one of the nation's largest
financial companies, came after a board investigation concluded he had
engaged in an improper pattern of self-dealing and abuse of power, according
to people familiar with the probe. The probe made several allegations
against former Chairman and Chief Executive Robert J. O'Connell, among them
that he inflated the value of a special retirement account by tens of
millions of dollars, bought a company-owned condominium at a below-market
price and interfered in efforts to discipline his son and son-in-law, who
worked at MassMutual, said people familiar with the probe.
James Bandler and Joann S. Lublin, "MassMutual Board Fired CEO On Finding
'Willful Malfeasance'," The Wall Street Journal, June 10, 2005; Page
A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111836461879356053,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Humor
Forwarded by a guy who's old enough for this cruise
Boy have I got the best investment for you!! Just read on.
About 2 years ago my wife and I were on a cruise through the western
Mediterranean aboard a Princess liner. At dinner we noticed an elderly lady
sitting alone along the rail of the grand stairway in the main dining room.
I also noticed that all the staff, ships officers, waiters, busboys, etc.,
all seemed very familiar with this lady. I asked our waiter who the lady
was, expecting to be told she owned the line, but he said he only knew that
she had been on board for the last four cruises, back to back As we left the
dining room one evening I caught her eye and stopped to say hello. We
chatted and I said, "I understand you've been on this ; ship for the last
four cruises". She replied, "Yes, that's true." I stated, "I don't
understand" and she replied, without a pause, "It's cheaper than a nursing
home". So, there will be no nursing home in my future. When I get old and
feeble, I am going to get on a Princess Cruise Ship. The average cost for a
nursing home is $200 per day. I have checked on reservations at Princess and
I can get a long term discount and senior discount price of $135 per day.
That leaves $65 a day for: 1. Gratuities which will only be $10 per day. 2.
I will have as many as 10 meals a day if I can waddle to the restaurant, or
I can have room service (which means I can have breakfast in bed every day
of the week).
3. Princess has as many as three swimming pools, a workout room, free
washers and dryers, and shows every night. 4. They have free toothpaste and
razors, and free soap and shampoo. 5. They will even treat you like a
customer, not a patient. An extra $5 worth of tips will have the entire
staff scrambling to help you. 6. I will get to meet new people every 7 or 14
days. 7. T.V. broken? Light bulb need changing? Need to have the mattress
replaced? No Problem! They will fix everything and apologize for your
inconvenience. 8. Clean sheets and towels every day, and you don't even have
to ask for them. 9. If you fall in the nursing home and break a hip you are
on Medicare; if you fall and break a hip on the Princess ship they will
upgrade you to a suite for the rest of your life. Now hold on for the best!
Do you want to see South America, the Panama Canal, Tahiti, Australia, New
Zealand, A sia, or name where you want to go? Princess will have a ship
ready to go. So don't look for me in a nursing home, just call shore to
ship.
PS And don't forget, when you die, they just dump you over the side at no
charge.
Forwarded by Auntie Be
This was the pilot on her airplane!
Forwarded by Dick Haar
I watched an ant climb a blade of grass this morning. When he reached the
top, his weight bent the blade down to the ground. Then, twisting his thorax
with insectile precision, he grabbed a hold of the next blade.
In this manner, he traveled across the lawn, covering as much distance
vertically as he did horizontally, which both amused and delighted me.
And then, all at once, I had what is sometimes called an "epiphany"; a
moment of heightened awareness in which every- thing becomes crystal clear.
Yes, hunched over that ant on my hands and knees, I suddenly knew what I
had to do... Quit drinking before noon.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
TO GOD - FROM THE DOG:
Dear God: Why do humans smell the flowers, but seldom, if ever, smell one
another?
Dear God: When we get to heaven, can we sit on your couch? Or is it still
the same old story?
Dear God: Why are there cars named after the jaguar, the cougar, the
mustang, the colt, the stingray, and the rabbit, but not ONE named for a
dog? How often do you see a cougar riding around? We do love a nice ride!
Would it be so hard to rename the "Chrysler Eagle" the "Chrysler Beagle"?
Dear God: If a dog barks his head off in the forest and no human hears
him, is he still a bad dog?
Dear God: We dogs can understand human verbal instructions, hand signals,
whistles, horns, clickers, beepers, scent ID's, electromagnetic energy
fields, and Frisbee flight paths. What do humans understand?
Dear God: More meatballs, less spaghetti, please.
Dear God: Are there mailmen in Heaven? If there are, will I have to
apologize?
Dear God: Let me give you a list of just some of the things I must
remember - to be a good dog.
1. I will not eat the cats' food before they eat it or after they throw
it up.
2. I will not roll on dead seagulls, fish, crabs, etc., just because I
like the way they smell.
3 I will not munch on "leftovers" in the kitty litter box, although they
are tasty.
4. The diaper pail is not a cookie jar.
5. The sofa is not a 'face towel'... neither are Mom and Dad's laps.
6. The garbage collector is not stealing our stuff.
7. My head does not belong in the refrigerator.
8. I will not bite the officer's hand when he reaches in for Mom's
driver's license and registration.
9. I will not play tug-of-war with Dad's underwear when he's on the
toilet.
10. Sticking my nose into someone's crotch is an unacceptable way of
saying "hello".
11. I don't need to suddenly stand straight up when I'm under the coffee
table.
12. I must shake the rainwater out of my fur before entering the house -
not after.
13. I will not throw up in the car.
14. I will not come in from outside and immediately drag my butt.
15. I will not sit in the middle of the living room and lick my crotch
when we have company.
16. The cat is not a 'squeaky toy' so when I play with him and he makes
that noise, it's usually not a good thing.
And, finally. My last question . . .
Dear God: When I get to Heaven may I have my testicles back?
Forwarded by Barb Hessel
Why English Teachers Die Young
Actual analogies and metaphors found in high school essays
01. Her face was a perfect oval, like a
circle that had its two sides gently compressed by a Thigh Master.
02. His thoughts tumbled in his head, making
and breaking alliances like underpants in a dryer without Cling Free.
03. He spoke with the wisdom that can only
come from experience, like a guy who went blind because he looked at a solar
eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it and now goes around
the country speaking at high schools about the dangers of looking at a solar
eclipse without one of those boxes with a pinhole in it.
04. She grew on him like she was a colony of
E. coli and he was room temperature Canadian beef.
05. She had a deep, throaty, genuine laugh,
like that sound a dog makes just before it throws up.
06. Her vocabulary was as bad as, like,
whatever.
07. He was as tall as a six-foot-three-inch
tree.
08. The revelation that his marriage of 30
years had disintegrated because of his wife's infidelity came as a rude
shock, like a surcharge at a formerly surcharge free ATM.
09. The little boat gently drifted across
the pond exactly the way a bowling ball wouldn't.
10. McBride fell 12 stories, hitting the
pavement like a Hefty bag filled with vegetable soup.
11. From the attic came an unearthly howl.
The whole scene had an eerie, surreal quality, like when you're on vacation
in another city and Jeopardy comes on at 7:00 p.m. instead of 7:30.
12. Her hair glistened in the rain like a
nose hair after a sneeze.
13. The hailstones leaped from the pavement,
just like maggots when you fry them in hot grease.
14. Long separated by cruel fate, the
star-crossed lovers raced across the grassy field toward each other like two
freight trains, one having left Cleveland at 6:36 p.m. traveling at 55 mph,
the other from Topeka at 4:19 p.m. at a speed of 35 mph.
15. They lived in a typical suburban
neighborhood with picket fences that resembled Nancy Kerrigan's teeth.
16. John and Mary had never met. They were
like two hummingbirds who had also never met.
17. He fell for her like his heart was a mob
informant and she was the East River.
18. Even in his last years, Grandpappy had a
mind like a steel trap, only one that had been left out so long, it had
rusted shut.
19. Shots rang out, as shots are wont to do.
20. The plan was simple, like my
brother-in-law Phil. But unlike Phil, this plan just might work.
21. The young fighter had a hungry look, the
kind you get from not eating for a while.
22. He was as lame as a duck. Not the
metaphorical lame duck, either, but a real duck that was actually lame,
maybe from stepping on a land mine or something.
23. The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe
and extended one slender leg behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant.
24. It was an American tradition, like
fathers chasing kids around with power tools.
25. He was deeply in love. When she spoke,
he thought he heard bells, as if she were a garbage truck backing up.
26. Her eyes were like limpid pools, only
they had forgotten to put in any pH cleanser.
27. She walked into my office like a
centipede with 98 missing legs.
28. It hurt the way your tongue hurts after
you accidentally staple it.
Forwarded by Paula
This is a test for us "old" kids! The answers are printed below, but
don't you cheat.
READY????? Here we go!
01. After the Lone Ranger saved the day and rode off into the sunset, the
grateful citizens would ask, Who was that masked man? Invariably, someone
would answer, "I don't know, but he left this behind." What did he leave
behind?____________
02. When the Beatles first came to the U.S. in early 1964, we all watched
them on The __________________ Show.
03. "Get your kicks, ___________________."
04. "The story you are about to see is true. The names have been
changed___________________."
05. "In the jungle, the mighty jungle, ________________."
06. After the Twist, The Mashed Potato, and the Watusi, we "danced" under
a stick that was lowered as low as we could go in a dance called the
"_____________."
07. "N_E_S_T_L_E_S", Nestle's makes the very best _______________."
08. Satchmo was America's "Ambassador of Goodwill." Our parents shared
this great jazz trumpet player with us. His name was _________________.
09. What takes a licking and keeps on ticking? _______________
10. Red Skelton's hobo character was named __________________ and Red
always ended his television show by saying, "Good Night, and
"_______________".
11. Some Americans who protested the Vietnam War did so by burning
their____________.
12. The cute little car with the engine in the back and the trunk in the
front was called the VW. What other names did it go by? ____________ &
_______________.
13. In 1971, singer Don MacLean sang a song about, "the day the music
died." This was a tribute to ___________________.
14. We can remember the first satellite placed into orbit. The Russians
did it. It was called ___________________.
15. One of the big fads of the late 50's and 60's was a large plastic
ring that we twirled around our waist. It was called the________________
Scroll Down
ANSWER S: 01. The Lone Ranger left behind a silver bullet. 02. The Ed
Sullivan Show 03. On Route 66 04. To protect the innocent. 05. The Lion
sleeps tonight 06. The limbo 07. Chocolate 08. Louis Armstrong 09. The Timex
watch 10. Freddy, The Freeloader, and "Good Night, and may God Bless." 11.
Draft cards (Bras were also burned.) 12. Beetle or Bug 13. Buddy Holly 14.
Sputnik 15. Hula hoop
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Because I'm a man, when the car isn't running very well, I will pop the
hood and stare at the engine as if I know what I'm looking at. If another
man shows up, one of us will say to the other, "I used to be able to fix
these things, but now with all these computers and everything, I wouldn't
know where to start." We will then drink beer and break wind as a form of
Holy Communion.
Because I'm a man, when I catch a cold, I need someone to bring me soup
and take care of me while I lie in bed and moan. You're a woman. You never
get as sick as I do, so for you this isn't a problem.
Because I'm a man, I can be relied upon to purchase basic groceries at
the store, like milk or bread. I cannot be expected to find exotic items
like "cumin" or "tofu." For all I know, these are the same thing. And never,
under any circumstances, expect me to pick up anything for which "feminine
hygiene product" is a euphemism. (F.Y.I. guys cumin is a spice and not a
bodily function)
Because I'm a man, when one of our appliances stops working, I will
insist on taking it apart, despite evidence that this will just cost me
twice as much, once the repair person gets here and has to put it back
together.
Because I'm a man, I must hold the television remote control in my hand
while I watch TV. If the thing has been misplaced, I may miss a whole show
looking for it (though one time I was able to survive by holding a
calculator)...applies to engineers mainly.
Because I'm a man, there is no need to ask me what I'm thinking about.
The answer is always either sex, cars or football. I have to make up
something else when you ask, so don't ask.
Because I'm a man, I do not want to visit your mother, or have your
mother come visit us, or talk to her when she calls, or think about her any
more than I have to. Whatever you got her for Mother's Day is okay; I don't
need to see it. And don't forget to pick up something for my mother too.
Because I'm a man, you don't have to ask me if I liked the movie. Chances
are, if you're crying at the end of it, I didn't.... and if you are feeling
amorous afterwards...then I will certainly at least remember the name and
recommend it to others.
Because I'm a man, I think what you're wearing is fine. I thought what
you were wearing five minutes ago was fine, too. Either pair of shoes is
fine. With the belt or without it, looks fine. Your hair is fine. You look
fine. Can we just go now?
Because I'm a man, and this is, after all, the year 2005, I will share
equally in the housework. You just do the laundry, the cooking, the
cleaning, the vacuuming, and the dishes, and I'll do the rest... like
looking for my socks, or like wandering around in the garden with a beer
wondering what to do.
Forwarded by John Dallair (You may have to be from San Antonio to
appreciate this one)
Here's an interesting little bit of history that you
might not have been aware of so I thought I'd pass it on to you. Here 'tis!
Most people don't know that back in 1912, Hellmann's mayonnaise was
manufactured in England.
In fact, the Titanic was carrying 12,000 jars of the condiment scheduled
for delivery in Vera Cruz, Mexico, which was to be the next port of call for
the great ship after its stop in New York.
This would have been the largest single shipment of mayonnaise ever
delivered to Mexico. But as we know, the great ship did not make it to New
York. The ship hit an iceberg and sank, and the cargo was forever lost.
The people of Mexico, who were crazy about mayonnaise, and were eagerly
awaiting its delivery, were disconsolate at the loss. Their anguish was so
great, that they declared a National Day of Mourning, which they still
observe to this day.
The National Day of Mourning occurs each year on May 5th and is known, of
course, as Sinko de Mayo.
WHAT!!!! You expected something educational?
And that's the way it was on June 15,
2005 with a little help from my friends.
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You
have to scroll down to the titles) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics ---
http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research Videos from Harvard University ---
http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor
(an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart
finance professor, Jim Mahar from St. Bonaventure University) ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting
newsletters are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from
TheCycles.com ---
http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com
are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information
Finder ---
http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links ---
http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best
international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to
questions in technology ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works ---
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style
Hints ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on
www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for
a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers
and education technology experts in higher education from around the
country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email:
rjensen@trinity.edu
May 31, 2005
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on May 31,
2005
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Of course the
people don't want war. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked,
and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to
danger. It works the same in any country.
Hermann Göring
Fraud Updates
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about
the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
Real time
meter of the U.S. cost of the war in Iraq ---
http://www.costofwar.com/
For Quotations/Tidbits of the Week go to
Quotations and Tidbits
For Humor of the Week go to
Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
My communications on
"Hypocrisy in Academia and the Media" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm
My “Evil
Empire” essay ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
"A New Lifeline for
Palms? PalmOne is hoping to revive demand with LifeDrive, which has large
storage, easy data transfer, and fancy media capabilities," Business Week,
May 19, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/PalmNew
Sales of Palms and other personal
digital assistants (PDAs) that do not double as phones have been on the
decline for several years amid stiffening competition from versatile cell
phones, BlackBerrys, and palmOne's own Treo. Now, palmOne (PLMO ) is taking
advantage of new storage technologies and software in an effort to breathe
fresh life into the stagnant category.
The goal is to get the handheld out of its
contacts-and-calendar rut and emphasize media capabilities that today's
phones can't touch. The $499 LifeDrive is the first Palm to incorporate a
hard drive, boosting storage capacity to 4 gigabytes. That's a huge leap up
from the 256 megabytes in palmOne's Tungsten T5 -- even if you account for
insertable memory cards that hold as much 2 gb. At least as important, new
software on the LifeDrive lets you manage files efficiently and move data
easily between the Palm and a PC.
The LifeDrive uses HotSync, part of every Palm ever
made, to keep info such as contacts and calendar synchronized with Microsoft
Outlook or the Palm Desktop software. But other files can be moved between
the Palm and a Windows PC just by dragging them to the LifeDrive Manager
folder on either the handheld or the computer. The next time the LifeDrive
is connected, the files are automatically transferred. (On Macs, you must
use a cruder method that treats the Palm as an external hard drive.) You can
connect to a computer using a USB cable, Bluetooth wireless, or Wi-Fi -- if
you don't mind setting up network sync.
MUSIC-PLAYER FLAWS. So what can you do with all
that storage? Of course, you can use it to carry critical files from your
computer, but a USB memory key is a lot handier and, at about $100 for a
1-gb model, a lot cheaper. LifeDrive is a better choice if you need to
transport massive amounts of data. And the bright 2 11/14-by-3 11/14-inch
screen makes it a good way to carry and display your photos.
If your camera, like most others, uses SD memory,
you can transfer pictures just by inserting the card into the LifeDrive's
slot. The LifeDrive also is good at showing videos, especially those
formatted to fill its 320-by-480-pixel display.
The LifeDrive can hold as much music as an iPod
Mini, but unfortunately it falls short as a music player. It doesn't provide
iPod-like automatic music sync between device and desktop. Despite all that
screen space, it doesn't display album covers. Out of the box, it handles
only the mp3 format and cannot play songs purchased or rented through
subscription. But an upgrade to handle protected Windows Media music is due
soon.
Continued in article
May 13, 2005 message
from David Albrecht
[albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
I just stumbled across
http://www.questia.com
Does anyone on this list use it?
David Albrecht
Bob Jensen's links to electronic
books and journals are at
http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=77436573
"Scholarly Journals' Premier Status Is Diluted by Web:
More Research Is Free Online Amid Spurt of Start-Ups; Publishers' Profits at
Risk A Revolt on UC's Campuses." by Bernard Wysocki Jr., The Wall Street
Journal," May 23, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111680539102640247,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
The 10-campus University of California system has
emerged as a hotbed of insurgency against this $5 billion global market.
Faculty members are competing against publishers with free or inexpensive
journals of their own. Two UC scientists organized a world-wide boycott
against a unit of Reed Elsevier -- the Anglo-Dutch giant that publishes
1,800 periodicals -- protesting its fees. The UC administration itself has
jumped into the fray. It's urging scholars to deposit working papers and
monographs into a free database in addition to submitting them for
publication elsewhere. It has also battled with publishers, including
nonprofits, to lower prices.
"We have to take back control from the publishers,"
says Daniel Greenstein, associate vice provost for the UC system, which
spends $30 million a year on scholarly periodicals.
The clash between academics and publishers was
exacerbated last year when the taxpayer-funded National Institutes of Health
proposed that articles resulting from NIH grants be made available free
online. That prompted protests from Reed Elsevier, John Wiley & Sons Inc.
and several nonprofit publishers such as the American Diabetes Association,
which argued such a move would hurt their businesses.
The NIH retreated and in February made the program
voluntary. It now asks authors to post on an NIH Web site any articles based
on NIH grants within 12 months of publication.
The debate comes at a time when it's easier than
ever to find scholarly articles by using simple Internet tools such as
Google. In late 2004, Google Inc., in Mountain View, Calif., launched Google
Scholar, a free service that can search for peer-reviewed articles as well
as theses, abstracts and other scholarly material, much of it in scientific
fields.
Traditional publishers argue that the expensive
process of selecting and editing journals is a necessary filter to help
scholars sift through vast amounts of research. The nonprofit publisher of
the prestigious Science magazine makes content available free after 12
months. Other publishers note that with a combination of free abstracts,
free distribution to the developing world and public-library subscriptions,
much of the globe already has access to what they produce.
"The vast majority -- 90% of researchers in the
world -- have access online to our material," says Karen Hunter, senior vice
president at Elsevier, the science and medical division of Reed Elsevier
that publishes the company's journals. Elsevier's scholarly journals bring
in about $1.6 billion in annual revenue with an operating-profit margin of
about 30%.
Publishers have been entrenched in academia for
decades. One big concern, the U.K.'s Taylor & Francis Group, now part of T&F
Informa PLC, was founded in the 18th century. The venerable nonprofit
Science was founded in the 1880s by Thomas Edison. The industry became
firmly established in the 1950s and 1960s in the wake of the Soviet space
program, whose success spurred a wave of scientific publishing.
Although learned societies such as the American
Physical Society hold sway at the top of the prestige pyramid, commercial
publishers have created a second tier, producing thousands of niche
periodicals from Addictive Behaviors to Zoology, both Elsevier titles.
Scholars are generally grateful that publishers take the risk of starting
new titles, which often take years to break even.
The publishers' prestige derives from the rigorous
system of peer review, in which a journal's editorial board will select
experts in a field to vet articles. At some top scholarly journals, less
than 10% of submitted articles make it into a publication. In turn, the
peer-review system lends authority to a scholar's work, and has long been a
springboard to academic advancement.
Aaron Edlin, a UC Berkeley professor of law and
economics, is a co-founder of Berkeley Electronic Press, publisher of 25
online scholarly journals. His playbook is simple: undercut giant rivals
with lower prices -- around $300 -- faster turnaround and Internet-only
distribution. Yet when Dr. Edlin helped write a paper on game theory
recently, he submitted it to the competition, the Journal of Economic
Theory, published by Elsevier.
The reason: Professor Edlin's co-author on the
paper is striving to win tenure at the California Institute of Technology
and needs exposure in big-name journals. "He thought it was important. I
respected his decision," says Prof. Edlin.
The peer-review system has many defenders. "There's
too much stuff out there, and we are all way too busy," says Lee Miller, a
retired professor of ecology at Cornell University and editor emeritus of
the nonprofit journal Ecology, published by the Ecological Society of
America. "Anything that saves you time and leads you to the most important
work is helpful."
In the 1990s, the commercial industry consolidated.
The biggest publishers began buying or building new journals and raising
prices. That edifice only began to be challenged with the rise of the
Internet, which cut distribution costs and triggered a wave of
experimentation in what is called "open access" publishing.
In London, a for-profit startup called BioMed
Central publishes more than 100 scholarly journals available free to the
public via the Internet. BioMed Central charges individual authors a
processing charge of about $850 but doesn't charge it for authors affiliated
with member institutions. BioMed Central says it has 527 institutional
members, including British and American universities, which pay between
$1,700 and $8,600 a year to belong.
In the U.S. a powerful open-access advocate has
been Harold Varmus, a Nobel laureate, former UC scholar and former NIH
director. He's now head of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New
York. He co-founded Public Library of Science with Berkeley's Dr. Eisen,
backed by a $9 million grant from a private foundation. Charging authors a
fee of $1,500, the group launched its first peer-reviewed journal, PLoS
Biology, in 2003, and also distributes its contents free on the Internet.
In the late 1990s, Dr. Eisen was studying the yeast
genome, a booming field that has a large overlap with the human genome and
200 journals publishing related research. He wanted all these journal
articles freely available at his fingertips, an impossible request because
many are behind subscription barriers.
Some scholars think publishing should operate like
the Linux computer operating system, where programmers build on each other's
work in an ongoing, collaborative project. In the scholarly realm, a
database called arXiv -- pronounced "archive," as if the "x" were the Greek
letter "chi" -- has become a repository of scholarship in the physics field.
It's owned and operated by Cornell University and partially supported by the
National Science Foundation. If the UC administration has its way, something
like that would be the norm throughout academia.
To experienced publishers, much of the open-access
talk seems naive. "A lot of this is self-righteous talk," says Alan Leshner,
executive publisher of Science and chief executive of its nonprofit parent,
the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He says giving away
content isn't a viable business model because of the tremendous costs of
putting out reputable journals.
He notes that Science gets 12,000 submissions and
publishes 800 articles a year on a $10 million editorial budget. That
averages more than $10,000 per published article, a high number because of
the costs associated with handling the unusually large number of submissions
the journal receives. Industry experts say typical per-article costs are
between $3,000 and $4,000.
If open access takes off, information will flow
faster, but publishers will make less money. Among those who would be hurt
is Reed Elsevier. Sami Kassab, analyst at investment house Exane BNP Paribas
in London, estimates that such a movement could sharply cut the company's
profit margin on periodicals to between 10% and 15% of revenue, from the
current 30% or more.
Currently, the open-access movement makes up
between 1% and 2% of the market, experts say. While that number seems small,
the concept is assuming an important role channeling academic discontent.
"There's a lot of sentiment that work is being
taken advantage of by the commercial publishers," says Alessandro Lizzeri,
associate professor of economics at New York University and editor of
Elsevier's Journal of Economic Theory. He says that while editors get little
compensation for their work, authors and reviewers -- aside from prestige --
usually get nothing or just a nominal fee.
Prof. Lizzeri says that two of the 40 members of
his editorial board resigned recently because the journal isn't free to
readers. "If half the board resigns I'm in trouble," he says.
These rumblings hit the University of California
early on. In October 2003, faculty members made a rare display of solidarity
with the university administration. Two scientists at the University of
California at San Francisco staged a protest over a $91,000 bill from
Elsevier's Cell Press unit for one year's access to six biology journals.
The two professors called for a world-wide boycott, urging fellow scholars
at UC and beyond to refuse to serve as authors, editors or peer reviewers at
the six periodicals in question.
Their timing couldn't have been better for the
university administration, which was just about to begin negotiations with
the Reed Elsevier unit over a new contract. In the late 1990s, all UC
campuses had banded together into a single buying consortium. In 2002, the
university hired Dr. Greenstein, a history professor turned expert on
digital libraries. With the state of California's budget crisis forcing him
to trim library spending to $62 million a year, Dr. Greenstein wanted to
take a hard line.
"It was the opening shot, really, in struggling
head-on with this world of scientific publishing," says Keith Yamamoto,
executive vice dean at UCSF medical school and one of the boycott's leaders.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on scholarly journal publication fraud
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournals
"Simplified Classics? Educators Are Divided," by Jeffrey A.
Trachtenberg, The Wall Street Journal, May 23, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111680107167640163,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Can kids with reading problems find satisfaction in
retold versions of such classics as "Treasure Island" and "Little Women?"
Barnes & Noble Inc.'s Sterling Publishing unit has
launched a new line of 10 literary classics that appeal to both those who
struggle to read and to avid younger students whose reading skills aren't
quite strong enough to let them master "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" in its
original. The books, which have been retold using simpler words, have been
surprisingly hot sellers, so much so that they are already in their fifth
printing.
Priced at $4.95 each, the books have already sold
about 533,000 copies. "There's a large world of people with disabilities who
can't appreciate the classics because the books are too difficult," says
Barnes & Noble's CEO Steve Riggio, whose daughter has Down syndrome. There
are currently 613,000 copies of the series in print. Nine more are planned
next year.
The books have won praise of a number of educators.
Peggy Charren, a visiting scholar at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education, an advocate for higher quality children's media, and a recipient
of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, said she has read several of the
books. "I was worried because they are truncated, but they're terrific," she
said. "For some kids with reading problems, picture books may be as far as
they get. But when they can make sense out of symbols on the page, you want
them to have to the option of reading something wonderful, like a classic."
Jeffrey Goldstein, a psychologist at the University
of Utrecht in the Netherlands who specializes in children and media, said he
thinks the series is a useful way of making the classics accessible to kids
who might otherwise not be able to read them. "It's extraordinarily
important for children to feel that they have access to literature," said
Mr. Goldstein. "As a teacher you want children to enjoy reading and feel
connected to other people who have read these books." The substitution of
contemporary shorter words for 19th-century English words is less important
than the fact that kids are being exposed to classic literature that their
parents might have read, he added.
But several schools that teach kids with reading
disabilities say they're emphasizing classics in the original text and won't
be buying copies for their classrooms.
One academic institution says kids with reading
issues may do better with the originals. "Just because you have reading
problems doesn't mean you can't appreciate complex thought and complex
language," says Maureen Sweeney, assistant head and director of admissions
of the Windward School, an independent nonprofit school in White Plains,
N.Y., for children who have language-based learning disabilities. Ms.
Sweeney said such students can be taught to read in a multisensory program
that includes books-on-tape. "We don't want a watered-down curriculum," she
said.
Continued in article
May 15 reply about how to find information about privately-owned
corporations
I think US Census Bureau data is a good source for
certain US corporation characteristics.
For example, this Census site,
http://www.census.gov/epcd/susb/2001/us/US--.HTM ,
gives 2001 firm numbers information (firm definition available at site).
From this Census site,
http://www.census.gov/csd/sbo/ , you can find
results of Census survey programs for characterizing business owners.
And, at this Census site,
http://www.census.gov/epcd/www/smallbus.html , you
can get numbers on 1997 US businesses in various legal categories.
(Subsequent data probably will not differ much in terms of percentages).
Depending on exactly what you are looking for,
Census business data could very well give you the answer.
Richard Torian
www.informationforaccountants.com
"AIG Probes Bring First Charges: New York Suit Accuses Insurer,
Greenberg and Ex-Finance Chief Of Manipulating Firm's Results," by Ian McDonald
and Theo Francis, The Wall Street Journal, May 27, 2005; Page C1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111712238633844135,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
In the first formal charges to come
In the first formal charges to come from the probes
of American International Group Inc.'s accounting, New York state
authorities sued AIG, former Chairman Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg and the
insurance company's former chief financial officer, painting a picture of
widespread accounting gimmickry aimed at duping regulators and investors.
New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer and
the New York State Insurance Department alleged that AIG engaged in "sham
transactions," hid losses and created false income. On one occasion, Mr.
Greenberg even laughed at a joke about one of the alleged maneuvers, the
civil lawsuit says.
The goal, the suit contends, was to exaggerate the
strength of the company's core underwriting business, propping up the price
of one of the nation's most widely held stocks.
AIG shares rose 3% yesterday after the lawsuit was
announced, as investors saw that the charges were civil, not criminal,
though a criminal investigation of individuals continues. AIG is the world's
biggest publicly traded seller of property-casualty insurance to companies
and is the largest life insurer in the U.S., as measured by premiums.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on insurance company frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
A Tribute to Earl BeattyOne of my good friends in San Antonio did not survive a lung transplant
surgery. His long-time friend named Charles Downey, wrote the
following tribute.
May 13, 2005 message from Charles Downey
[downeyc@plasticsurgery.com]
Earl Beatty was a real landmark in my life. For
those of you who don't know me, let me introduce myself: In the last 35
years, since I crossed paths with Earl, I have at various times, been a
book author, a magazine writer and a syndicated journalist distributed
by the L.A. Times and the N.Y. Times and others like Playboy and
Reader's Digest. My stuff has been, and is being, read on five of the
seven continents. (I just can't sell Africa and there are no paying
publications in Antartica.) I've made my living doing one form or
another of writing since 1970, thanks to Earl Beatty.
So it was with the greatest sadness I learned
of his passing. Earl was an absolute turning point in my life -he gave
me a job in journalism when I was a rank amateur and really didn't know
a thing about the work except you got to sit down during your shift. To
make the scenario even more unlikely, our unit's basic work was in
intelligence and was linked to NSA and other spook organizations tied
into the most secret machinations of the Cold War. Needless to say, our
colleagues normally did not publish newspapers.
It was 1967 and I was two years into a
four-year assignment that was basically a way to dodge Vietnam. I
enlisted for Europe but the duty was miserable; I worked rotating shifts
in an Army version of a Western Union outfit that carried intercepts and
other intelligence picked out of the air from the Warsaw Pact nations.
Some of the traffic made your hair stand on end like one torn message I
once repaired that reported a Russian invasion fleet off the coast of
Virginia. Of course, that report thankfully turned out to be bogus but
from where I sat, it looked like most of the world was going to end and
soon.
Being desperate, I dreamed up a scenario to
start a unit newspaper. And it eventually landed on Earl's desk in
Frankfurt, Germany, at the European headquarters of the U.S. Army
Security Agency. There, I met Earl's clerk-typist Art Dworken - who as
luck would have it had a degree in journalism --and we set to work,
winging it as we went.
After five months, we hit on something that was
like winning a huge lottery on the same day you learn an unknown uncle
just left you a million bucks.
I can still see the following scene. It's one
of the most gratifying - and unforgettable -- moments in my life, one I
will carry with me until my own demise. On a quiet, dreary day in
February, 1968, the normally placid Earl ran out of his office with
tears streaming down his face, crying "We won! We won!" Our
make-it-as-you newspaper won the top prize - WORLDWIDE, no less, in the
judging contests for 1968's Army newspapers. We three were astounded on
three counts: One, we did even not know the prizes and judging existed.
Two, a somebody unknown to us then and to this very day entered us into
the judging and, three, Art and I - with Earl's approval -- were
basically shooting from the hip as we went along, hoping against hope
that the Army would not find us out and send us back to some form of
real soldiering (READ: live in a tent.)
I think it all leads back to Earl seeing
something in both Art and me which we could not see in ourselves. (I
sure wish he would have told us what, exactly, it was!) Consequently, he
supported almost every off-the-wall and unconventional thing we did and
frequently used his rank to run interference, blocking by-the-book Army
lunkheads who insisted real soldiers wrote nothing but orders and that
an spook unit should publish nothing short of K.P. lists.
In the face of all that, Earl was kind,
understanding, cheerful, encouraging and, occasionally, full of
compliments. He got mad at me only once when I, as usual, dodged a 5
a.m. alert. (Alerts were called to practice what we would do -- besides
shivering in our unshined boots -- in case the Ruskies charged across in
their tanks.) Later, he angrily asked how I had missed the alert
although all the lower ranks in the office showed. I smarted off with a
"Sorry, couldn't find my parachute" remark and he became so angry, he
got red in the face. I also remember how he and Linda delighted in Art's
and my company although there were rules, both written and unwritten,
about fraternization wherein officers should never socialize with
enlisted men. Earl made sure Art and I got tickets to the swankest place
in Frankfurt for New Year's Eve, 1969, even though the whole
headquarters officer core showed up and looked down their noses at the
site of a field grade officer in the company of two Sp5's. Nonetheless,
we had a ball.
I have a lot of wonderful memories of Earl.
I remember him explaining what it was like for
an airborne trooper to roll across the side of the ship while jumping
from an otherwise perfectly good airplane and what his first tour in
Vietnam was like; I remember him first explaining what Air America
really was and thinking, what a shame I could not write a movie script
about it. (For those of you who don't know, Air America was the C.I.A's
personal airlines.) Of course, the nations against which we spied are
long gone and the movie about Air America with Mel Gibson and Robert
Downey, Jr. turned out far better and funnier than any script I could
have penned but, hey, at least they got some of my name into it.) Of
course, the memories about my too short time with Earl Beatty will live
on.
More than once, when life has gotten
complicated, I have wished that I could relive those days again.
R.I.P., Earl. We won't see the likes of you
again.
From Associated Colleges of the South (ACS)
TRANSFORMATIONS: CALL FOR PAPERS FOR SUMMER
2005 ISSUE
Transformations, Volume III, Issue #1 (Summer,
2005) will be dedicated to the theme of collaboration. This theme
encompasses collaborations both within and beyond the institution. A
particular area of interest is alliances among faculty, librarians and
technologists, and formal or informal organizational structures that
promote relationships among these constituencies. How has the "merged
organization" promoted (or not) meaningful collaboration on liberal arts
campuses? Have consortial organizations changed the way colleagues work
together? What are the lessons we can learn from successful
collaborations? Have they (or should they have) changed the way we work
in liberal arts colleges?
We welcome papers from technologists,
librarians, faculty and administrators addressing these topics. For more
information and a listing of authors guidelines, please see
http://www.colleges.org/transformations/index.php?q=node/view/31
.
Deadline for submission is May 31, 2005.
Please send submissions to the co-editors, Bob
Johnson (Rhodes Colleges),
johnsonb@rhodes.edu and Terry
Metz (Wheaton College),
tmetz@wheatoncollege.edu
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
The Color Test
Try this! It's tougher than you first expect! I
promise you you'll take it more than once!
http://www.njagyouth.org/colortest.swf
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Here is a
math
puzzle
sure to blow your mind!
Personally I would like to know who came up with this and
why he/she is not running the country!
>1. Grab a calculator. (you
can't
do this one in your head)
>2. Key in the first 3 digits of your phone number (NOT area
code)
>3. Multiply by 80
>4. Add 1
>5. Multiply by 250
>6. Add the last 4 digits of your phone
number
>7. Add the last 4 digits of your phone number again.
>8. Subtract 250
>9. Divide by 2
>Do you recognize the answer?
"What Will SAP Do Next? The software maker is talking partnerships, says
analyst Bruce Richardson, who sees being "ubiquitous as Microsoft" as the
chief goal," Business Week, May 18, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/SAPnext
Few technology analysts have followed German
software titan SAP (SAP ) as long as Bruce Richardson has. In 1991, he
attended its first major U.S. conference, a small affair in New Orleans.
At the time, SAP was a $300 million business selling software big
companies used for such functions as inventory management and financial
planning.
During the conference in New Orleans, SAP
introduced what was then a revolutionary concept called client/server
computing. The idea, courtesy of the software gurus at SAP, was actually
fairly simple: Big corporations could replace their mainframes with new
software that took advantage of increasingly powerful PCs connected to
server computers.
By 1996, SAP had grown into a $1 billion
company. Today, it's pushing $10 billion in annual sales and ranks as
the world's third-largest independent software maker, behind Microsoft
(MSFT ) and Oracle (ORCL ). Richardson, the chief research officer at
the tech consulting company AMR Research, was at another SAP conference,
on May 17 in Boston, where he took a break from meetings with company
executives to talk with BusinessWeek Online Technology Editor Jim
Kerstetter. The following are edited excerpts of their interview:
Q: So, I understand you met with the top four
execs at SAP. What did they have to say?
A: It was widely expected that they would
announce their Salesforce.com (CRM ) killer. But they decided to stay on
message about their enterprise services architecture. They're talking
about Hewlett-Packard (HPQ ) building some sort of appliance to do
unbelievably fast analytics. They're talking about a partnership with
Cisco (CSCO ) to build networking equipment optimized to work with SAP.
And they're talking about several other partners.
But until you have the details on what's in the
box, it's difficult to say more specifically what they will be doing.
Really, this was about SAP showing their enterprise services strategy,
and that it's on track.
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's threads on ERP processes are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245glosap.htm
Journal of Derivatives Accounting ,Vol. 2, No. 1 (March 2005) ---
http://www.worldscinet.com/jda/02/0201/S02198681050201.html
Bob Jensen's free tutorials and videos on Derivatives Accounting are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Quotations from editions of Tidbits May 16-May 30, 2005
The entire Tidbits Directory is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsdirectory.htm
Music for the Quiet of Summer: Killin
Time ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/time.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
A man with no dreams, no illusions
and no ideals would be a monster, a wild boar with a degree in pure
mathematics.
Fabrizio De André
Only cultured people like learning;
ignoramuses prefer to teach.
Edouard Le Berquier
Some time back, I reported a study that concluded small amounts of
alcohol aided cognition in older women. But alcohol may be more problematic
in younger women than in men.
Young women aged 16 to 24 are particularly
prone to binge drinking, with 49 per cent cramming their weekly consumption
of alcohol into one to three days.
Shan Ross, "Women drinkers more prone to brain damage," The Scotsman,
May 16, 2005 ---
http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=532052005
Key points
• Alcohol consumption among women in the UK
highest in Europe
• German brain scan study found women
especially vulnerable to binge drinking
• Police say 'ladette' culture has been
growing over the past 20 years
Key quote
"We know that women metabolise alcohol differently from men and absorb
it into their bodies more quickly" - Srabani Sen, chief executive of
Alcohol Concern
Story in full
ALCOHOL is much more likely to damage women’s brains than men’s, new
research published yesterday has warned.
The findings will be of serious concern to
alcohol abuse campaigners and health professionals faced with a culture
where binge drinking among females is ever more prevalent.
Alcohol consumption among women in the UK is
already the highest in Europe and a recent report predicted it is set to
surge over the next five years - possibly even overtaking the amount
consumed by men.
Continued in article
Incredible Interactive Graphics
May 15, 2005 message from Denise Nitterhouse (Condor)
[dnitterh@CONDOR.DEPAUL.EDU]
Today's (Sun 5/15/05) online New York Times
has the most amazing interactive graphics I've ever seen, as well as
interesting socio-economic content, in "Class Matters". Worth checking
out, you may have to register. Hope the link works
- NATIONAL - Class Matters: Shadowy Lines
That Still Divide A new series begins with an overview of the role
social class plays in America today. NYTimes.com has interactive
graphics that help you see where you fit in the American population,
and that take a closer look at income mobility, public opinion and
the intersection of income and education. Also, a forum to share
your thoughts.
http://www.nytimes.com/pages/national/class/index.html?th&emc=th
Denise Nitterhouse, MBA, DBA
School of Accountancy & Management Information Systems
DePaul University
1 East Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, IL 60604
dnitterh@depaul.edu
A Possible Incredible Mistake by Newsweek Magazine
"Newsweek Says Article on Quran Might Have Contained Errors," by
Joe Hagan and Sara Schaeffer-Munoz, The Wall Street Journal, May 16,
2005; Page B2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111620043495334176,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Newsweek magazine yesterday said a report it
had published two weeks ago that helped spark fatal riots in Afghanistan
might have contained errors.
The article, printed in the May 9 issue,
reported that "sources" had told the magazine that interrogators at the
U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, had flushed a Quran down
a toilet to rattle Muslim detainees. The item, written by reporters
Michael Isikoff and John Barry, added that the findings would appear in
a coming report by the Miami-based U.S. Southern Command, which oversees
the prison. The magazine also reported that investigators probing abuses
at the Cuban detention center had confirmed "infractions alleged in
internal FBI emails that surfaced late last year."
The report inflamed Muslims in the Middle East
and parts of Asia, sparking protests where marchers carried Newsweek.
There were large protests in Indonesia and Gaza, and in Afghanistan
protests led to riots in which a reported 16 people were killed.
In an editor's letter and an article published
today, the magazine said parts of its original report were flawed.
Newsweek said its original anonymous source recently said he isn't sure
that the Quran allegation is actually in the report, and that it might
just be a story told by former detainees.
Though Newsweek sent a copy of the item to a
Pentagon official before it appeared, the official, who didn't raise
questions about the allegation, might not have had detailed knowledge of
what was in the report, the magazine said.
Continued in article
SEC Finds Retirement-Fund Issues
A government examination of retirement-fund
consulting uncovered significant conflicts of interest between consulting
firms and the money managers they recommend to clients, according to people
familiar with the matter. A months-long study to be released today by the
Securities and Exchange Commission is expected to confirm what regulators
have long suspected: the existence of undisclosed financial ties between
consultants and money-management firms that can influence the
recommendations consultants make to their retirement-fund clients.
Deborah Solomon, "SEC Finds Retirement-Fund Issues," The Wall Street
Journal, May 16, 2005; Page C3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111620205687434194,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Bob Jensen's thread on "The Pension Fund Consulting Racket" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#PensionFundConsulting
An Annual Report on American Journalism ---
http://www.stateofthemedia.org/2005/index.asp
Best of Photojournalism 2005
http://www.nppa.org/competitions/best_of_still_photojournalism/2005/photography/winners/
Enron's useless code of ethics
David C. Farrell held up a half-inch-thick document
titled " Enron Code of Ethics 2000," and stared across a table at four
colleagues sitting in a conference room at Sun Microsystems' campus-style
office complex here in Silicon Valley. "I wave this around at meetings to
make a point," Mr. Farrell said. "It's not enough just to write a code of
ethics. The management and the people who work at a company have to lead by
example. We call it 'the tone at the top.' "
Harry Hurt III, "Drop That Ledger! This Is the Compliance Officer," The
New York Times, May 15, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/15/business/yourmoney/15comply.html
Alexis de Tocqueville may have the last laugh when it comes to
predicting accurately the course of history
2005 marks the bicentenary of the birth of one of
19th century Europe’s most insightful political thinkers. Less well-known
than Marx, Alexis de Tocqueville may have the last laugh when it comes to
predicting accurately the course of history. This is especially true when it
comes to understanding some of “Old” Europe’s current economic and political
malaises. Tocqueville himself was a study in contrasts: a nobleman who
embraced the ideals of 1789 despite the Revolution’s guillotining of members
of his family; a self-proclaimed liberal who abhorred 19th century French
liberalism’s rabid anti-clericalism; a practicing Catholic who admitted his
faith was undermined by reading Enlightenment thinkers. Perhaps because of
these tensions Tocqueville saw things that others of his time could not.
Tocqueville is best remembered for his Democracy in America, a book that
sought to explain the free society that had taken root in North America to
the Europe of his time. Tocqueville did not, however, write as a detached
observer. He was anxious to help European societies transition to the
democratic arrangements he considered inevitable, without experiencing the
death and dictatorship endured by France during its Revolution. All of
Tocqueville’s writings repay careful reading. Yet it is his concerns about
democracy’s future that are most relevant to Europe today-especially old
Europe. This particularly concerns Tocqueville’s warnings regarding what he
called “soft-despotism.”
Samuel Gregg, "Old Europe’s New Despotism," Action Institute, May 11,
2005 ---
http://www.acton.org/ppolicy/comment/article.php?id=267
Interactive science learning activities from Depaul University
Welcome to a unique genre of education materials.
Paper Plate Education is an initiative to reduce complex notions to simple
paper plate explanations. This website promotes innovative hands-on
Activities that you can experience across a range of interests, at varying
degrees of complexity, and at a low price—all with common paper plates.
Paper Plate Education ---
http://analyzer.depaul.edu/paperplate/
Retaking the Universities
Nevertheless, as one looks around at academic life
these days, it is easy to conclude that corruption yields not only decay but
also opportunities. Think of the public convulsion that surrounded the
episode of Ward Churchill's invitation to speak at Hamilton College earlier
this year. The spectacle of a highly paid academic with a fabricated
background comparing the victims of 9/11 to a Nazi bureaucrat was too much.
Mr. Churchill's fellow academics endeavored--they are still endeavoring--to
rally round. But the public wasn't buying it. Such episodes, as Victor Davis
Hanson noted in National Review recently, were like "a torn scab revealing a
festering sore beneath"
Roger Kimball, "Retaking the Universities A battle plan," Opinion
Journal, May 11, 2005 ---
http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110006673
"Untapped Potential : US Science and Technology Cooperation with the
Islamic World," by Michael A. Levi and Michael B. D'arcy, Brookings
Institute, March 2005 ---
http://brookings.edu/fp/saban/analysis/darcy20050419.pdf
Academics return to Iran
Before the 1979 revolution in Iran, the country’s
ties to American higher education were extensive. Thousands of Iranian
students enrolled at American colleges. And American researchers maintained
numerous long-term projects in Iran, studying its archaeology, history,
faiths, and languages. For 25 years after the revolution, ties between
academics in the two countries were negligible. In the last year, however,
contacts have started to resume. The presidents of Oberlin College, the
University of California at Davis, and the American University in Cairo all
went to Iran to discuss exchange efforts in the last year — and their visits
are believed to be the first by American college presidents since 1979.
Scott Jaschik, "Return to Iran," Inside Higher Ed, May 16, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/16/iran
The new Mobile 365 service
So, for instance, when a college student who is a
Verizon Wireless customer sends a text message to the cell phone of a friend
who uses Cingular Wireless -- "Happy hour in 20 minutes," perhaps -- Mobile
365 makes sure the information is delivered. The company picks up the
message from one network, routes it to the other, tracks the billing
information for both carriers and charges a small fee for each transaction.
Before Mobile 365, text messaging between carriers had been more limited --
not impossible, but constrained by a patchwork of policies and technologies
employed by different carriers. Mobile 365 isn't the only vehicle for
messages that move between the different cell phone services. But it has
captured nearly 80 percent of the market.
Ellen McCarthy, "A New Medium For Their Text Messages," The Washington
Post, May 12, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/11/AR2005051102088.html
The Consecrated Heretic
On newstands now — or at least the ones with a
decent selection of foreign periodicals — you can find a special number of
Le Magazine littéraire devoted entirely to Jean-Paul Sartre. Last month was
the 25th anniversary of the grand funeral procession in Paris that drew
50,000 people out into the spring rain to see him off. (It was the last
great demonstration of the 1960s generation, as people said at the time.)
And next month marks the centennial of his birth. He was “the conscience of
his times,” the cover announces. That is certainly arguable. It tends to
equate denunciation with ethical critique. The man who declared, in 1952,
that Soviet citizens enjoyed perfect freedom to criticize their government
should probably be Exhibit A for any demonstration that sometimes
contrarianism is not enough. But what is not in doubt – to judge by the rest
of issue – is that Sartre was the most-photographed philosopher in history.
Scott McLemee, "The Consecrated Heretic," Inside Higher Ed,
May 12, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/12/mclemee
"A Dean's Life Part II," by C.S. James (pseudonym), Inside Higher Ed,
May 12, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/05/12/dean
Dear Dean,
I am sorry I cannot be at Professor Meany’s
final exam tonight. Do to the fact that I’m working tonight, because my
boss keeps changing my work Schedule. This is probably because I was
dating his daughter then dumped her for a rich Blonde. I need the money
because I have none to pay for school. So any of the days I missed, I
was working not goofing off. Professor Meany doesn’t understand. He is
going to flunk me. Since I’m on probation, that means I’ll be expelled.
Once again I’m very Sorry Sir. Can you help me get back in school?
Perform research but to generate “evidence” favoring theories promoted
by eco-theologians
In a mere couple of decades, science has been
turned on its head. We now have whole richly endowed academic departments
whose function is not to perform research but to generate “evidence”
favouring theories promoted by eco-theologians in government and
bureaucracy. If you have been given millions of dollars to investigate
fairies at the bottom of the garden, and have created a large department
with mouths to feed, are you going to turn round and say “There aren’t any”?
Nigel Hawkes, "Number of the Month," Number Watch, January 2005 ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/2005 January.htm
Update on alleged censorship ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/2005 May.htm
Give us your sick yearning for free medical services
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
issued final guidance Monday that sets up a system for reimbursement.
Lawmakers set aside $1 billion over four years for the program, created by
Medicare legislation passed in 2003. For hospitals in border states, the
additional money can mean the difference between running a profitable
business or an unprofitable one, said Don May, vice president of policy for
the American Hospital Association.
"U.S. to pay medical bills for illegal immigrants," CNN, May 10, 2005
---
http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/05/10/heallth.illegal.ap/index.html
DARPA Says Funding to Universities Rising, Not Falling
The Pentagon has not cut funds for university
studies of fundamental science and technology in favor of projects with more
of an immediate impact to the military, the director of the Defense
Department's research agency said Thursday. The statement countered
criticism from computer scientists who complained their funding from the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has been reduced at the same time
the agency seems to be focusing more on near-term research projects. In the
past, military-funded basic research at universities has led -- eventually
-- to the Internet, databases and other new computer technologies. Critics
fear that the military's shift from "blue sky" research would undermine the
nation's technological leadership. "There has been no decision to divert
resources," DARPA Director Tony Tether said in prepared testimony before the
House Science Committee in Washington, D.C. The congressional hearing was
prompted by the scientists' complaints and reports that the National Science
Foundation has seen a sharp increase in grant requests.
Matthew Fordahl, "DARPA Says Funding to Universities Rising, Not Falling,"
MIT's Technology Review, May 13, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/ap/ap_3051305.asp?trk=nl
China overtook the United States as the world's leading consumer of
most industrial raw materials
Over the past year, China overtook the United
States as the world's leading consumer of most industrial raw materials, and
replaced Japan as the world's second-largest consumer of oil. This enormous
thirst for raw materials is changing the direction of Chinese foreign policy
and military strategy, and comes with considerable risks.
David Hale, "China's Insatiable Appetite," The Wall Street Journal,
May 12, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111584745686530941,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan defended the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan defended
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act that Congress passed after a series of corporate
accounting scandals, saying he is surprised that a law enacted so "rapidly"
has "functioned as well as it has." Delivering a commencement address at the
University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School yesterday, Mr. Greenspan said
the 2002 law "importantly reinforced the principle that ... corporate
managers should be working on behalf of shareholders to allocate business
resources to their optimum use."
David Wessel, "Corporate Overhauls Are Proving To Be Effective, Greenspan
Says," The Wall Street Journal, May 16, 2005; Page C3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111616543499633916,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Bob Jensen's threads on reforms are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudProposedReforms.htm
Trivia from The Washington Post on May 11, 2005
What, you don't have a blog? According to
one blog expert, how many people currently write online journals?
A.
8 million
B.
4 million
C.
800,000
D.
400,000
Why can't credit rating companies be more like eBay?
Why, then, are the credit reporting agencies
reviled, while systems like eBay are widely admired? The answer has to do
with the architecture in which our digital doubles roam. Commercial data
vendors are stubbornly clinging to their early-20th-century origins as card
files full of private dope, compiled to keep a local merchant from trusting
a deadbeat. In those days, data vendors had no contract or relationship with
the people on whom they compiled reports - and they still don't. Credit
agencies are hostile to consumers who want to know what's being said about
them. Negative information can go unnoticed for years until it suddenly
results in punishment from a lender or retailer. There is little chance to
challenge bad comments, even if the original report is inaccurate. On eBay,
by contrast, when you get a black mark you immediately know who gave it to
you and why. The news that feedback has been posted arrives by email. The
design of the system acknowledges that both parties, reporter and
reported-upon, share an interest in the data. Although feedback disputes are
common, eBay has made itself a transparent broker, rather than a bureau of
evil rumors.
Gary Wolf, "The New Multiple Personality Disorder," Wired News, May
2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.05/start.html?pg=2?tw=wn_tophead_8
Bob Jensen's threads on FICO rating and other credit agency frustrations are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#FICO
Pain and Brain and Sex Differences
Today, patients undergoing surgery get
painkillers in a standard dosage mainly determined by body weight. But
"there may be a point in time when we may be able to tell which patient
responds to which type of pain medicine," said Dr. Sunny Anand, director of
the Pain Neurobiology Laboratory at Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little
Rock. A patient could get a regimen of painkillers that will take into
account his or her age, sex and pain threshold, and compensate for any side
effects or possible predisposition to addiction. "I don't think it's science
fiction," Anand said. "Within the next five years we will be there." There
has already been some progress in understanding the genetic basis of pain.
One of the primary areas of discovery has been the most fundamental: the
difference between men and women. Many scientists believe that male and
female brains differ in architecture, and consequently, "some of the genetic
differences that create sex brain differences may make pain vulnerability
different," said Dr. Lonnie Zeltzer, director of the pediatric pain program
at UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital.
Andrew Chang, "Painkillers Designed Especially for You?" ABC News,
May 11, 2005 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/PainManagement/story?id=694929&page=1
Two links forwarded by Dick Wolff
Longevity Game
Welcome to the Longevity Game! See how your lifestyle can affect you in the
years to come by answering just 12 quick questions. Your expected age will
show in the tabulator in the upper left corner. Keep in mind your answers
may increase, decrease, or have no affect on your expected age ---
http://www.nmfn.com/tnetwork/longevity_game_popup.html
Passing of Generation
This is beautiful and touching. It loads fast and the music is lovely. It
will take a few minutes to scroll through it though.
http://www.wtv-zone.com/Mary/PASSINGOFGENERATION.HTML
Oh! Oh!: Byrd's LaSalle University was in Mandeville, La.
At the Fort Worth school district, colleagues refer
to district employee Michael J. Byrd as "Dr. Byrd." The intervention
specialist, who helps families in crisis, also has received a $600 annual
doctoral stipend every year since 2002, when he informed the district that
he earned his doctoral degree in psychology, district records show. But now,
Dr. Byrd has been demoted to Mr. Byrd. Byrd, 44, of Fort Worth received his
degree from LaSalle University. But not from the well-known LaSalle
University in Philadelphia. Rather, Byrd's LaSalle University was in
Mandeville, La. There is no connection between the two institutions.
Fort Worth Star Telegram, May 16, 2005
Bob Jensen's threads on diploma mills (including a logo infringement suit
won by Trinity University) are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#DiplomaMill
He wished he was an Oscar Meyer Weiner
May 12, 2005 message from Douglas Ziegenfuss
[dziegenf@ODU.EDU]
A week ago on May 5, 2005, (page 5), The
Virginian -Pilot (published in Norfolk, Virginia) had an AP article
detailing the life of Meinhardt Raabe, 89, who played the Munchkin
Coroner in the Wizard of Oz. According to the article, Raabe's tenacity
and ability to speak German landed him a job as an accountant with the
Oscar Meyer Company. He worked there for three decades and in addition
to being an accountant, he also traveled in the Oscar Meyer
Weinermobile.
Douglas E. Ziegenfuss
Professor and Chair, Department of Accounting
Room 2157 Constant Hall
Old Dominion University Norfolk, Virginia 23529-0229
Scientific Expeditions from the Field Museum ---
http://www.fieldmuseum.org/expeditions/interactive_main_content.html
Also see NASA's Destination Earth ---
http://www.earth.nasa.gov/flash_top.html
Mexicans are willing to take jobs "that not even blacks want to do?"
Mexican President Vicente Fox came under fire
yesterday for saying Mexicans were willing to take jobs "that not even
blacks want to do in the United States." "There's no doubt that the Mexican
men and women — full of dignity, willpower and a capacity for work — are
doing the work that not even blacks want to do in the United States," Fox
told a meeting of the Texas-Mexico Frozen Food Council in Puerto Vallarta on
Friday. Fox's remark came a day after Mexico announced it would formally
protest recent U.S. immigration reforms, including the decision...
New York Post, May 15, 2005 ---
http://www.nypost.com/news/worldnews/44081.htm
Is Bill Cosby Right?
Michael Eric Dyson’s tour for his book,
Is Bill Cosby Right? (Or Has the Black Middle Class Lost its
Mind?) has been busting out all over radio and TV in the past few weeks. In
fact there’s been lots of talk about Bill Cosby’s remarks concerning
declining morality and poor behavior stemming from a lack of parental
responsibility that’s holding black kids back. Mr. Cosby laments the
lifestyle of young blacks; from their dress, to their music, their views on
sex, their language and their moral ethos in general. He believes that it is
the fault of black parents for not checking more closely on the lives of
their children and in this he comes close to the mark.
Lisa Fabrizio, "The Peter Pan Generation," Chron Watch, May 15, 2005
---
http://www.chronwatch.com/content/contentDisplay.asp?aid=14575
Who's Preying on Your Grandparents?
Back in February, Jose and Gloria Aquino received a
flier in the mail inviting them to a free seminar on one of their favorite
topics: protecting their financial assets. As retirees, they were always on
the lookout for safe investment strategies as well as tips on how to make
sure they didn't outlive their savings. Besides, the flier promised a free
lunch for anyone attending the workshop, so what did they have to lose?
Potentially plenty, they would soon discover.
Gretchen Morgenson, "Who's Preying on Your Grandparents?" The New York
Times, May 15, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/15/business/yourmoney/15vict.html?
Bob Jensen's threads on investment advisor frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
What is a Chimera?
While the mythical Chimera is the stuff of
fantasy, researchers across the country are developing their own real-life
chimeras -- animals that are bred to incorporate the cells of other animals
or humans -- in an effort to better study human diseases or to create more
viable organs for people needing transplants. But as scientists continue to
create more varied chimeras -- especially those that have some amount of
human brain matter -- questions continue to rise from ethicists, religious
groups, and even other biomedical researchers, about the types of
limitations that should be set on the scientific community.
Karen Epper Hoffman, "The Laws of Man and Beast," MIT's Technology Review,
May 12, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_051105hoffman.asp?trk=nl
Why could they do so much better in a one-room school house in the old
days?
The failure rate for eighth-graders on a test that
measures students' knowledge of basic history and government has climbed
steadily from 62% in the 2001-02 school year, to 76% in 2002-03 and 81% in
2003-04. Top educrats who testified offered conflicting reasons for the drop
in scores. Elise Abegg, the department's social studies czar, said some
schools were spending too much time teaching students how to read and do
math out of fear that they would be labeled a "failing school" under the
federal No Child Left Behind law. But J.C. Brizard, the department's
executive director for high schools, said the real problem was that the
60-question standardized test requires that students be able to read and
understand the questions - something he said many cannot do. "They have
trouble comprehending what they are reading," Brizard said.
Joe Williams, "Duh! 81% of kids fail test: Social studies trips up
8th-graders," New York Daily News, May 11, 2005 ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/308139p-263646c.html
It doesn't take much to be in the Top Ten
"Hillsborough High School in Tampa earned a D grade
from the state last year," reports the St. Petersburg Times. "And under
federal standards, it fell far short." But there's good news (emphasis in
original): "On Monday, Newsweek magazine named it the 10th best high school
in the country. In the country." Well, at least Hillsborough students can be
thankful they don't go to the 11th-best school--or, even more so, that they
don't live in New York City. As best we can tell, the city's highest-ranking
school in the Newsweek list
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7723397/site/newsweek/page/5/ is Cardozo
High in the Queens neighborhood of Bayside, which finishes at No. 471.
Opinion Journal, May 11, 2005
The creation of a global database of human genetic variation and
associated anthropological data
(language, social customs, etc.)
Explore your own genetic journey with Dr. Spencer Wells. DNA analysis
includes a depiction of your ancient ancestors and an interactive map
tracing your genetic lineage around the world and through the ages.
The Genographic Project ---
http://www3.nationalgeographic.com/genographic/
Yearning to Breathe Free
The Cuban Rafter Phenomenon: A Unique Sea Exodus (from the University of
Miami) ---
http://balseros.miami.edu/
National Academy of Public Administration
The National Academy of Public Administration is an
independent, non-partisan organization chartered by Congress to assist
federal, state, and local governments in improving their effectiveness,
efficiency, and accountability. For more than 35 years, the Academy has met
the challenge of cultivating excellence in the management and administration
of government agencies ---
http://www.napawash.org/about_academy/index.html
Corporate Concierge Business Model
Reardon sells a subscription-based Web platform
that allows corporations to consolidate and procure a number of services at
lower costs, including those for airplane tickets, hotels, restaurants, and
conferencing. The company is positioning itself as a "corporate concierge,"
helping companies efficiently and inexpensively satisfy their everyday needs
-- from sending a package to buying paper clips. At launch, in February
2004, the company was able to boast a number of significant clients:
Cingular, Genesys, JDS Uniphase, Motorola, and Warner Music. It's
impressive, but remember that the company has been around for five years and
we’d expect it to have at least a handful of solid clients at this point
"Corporate Concierge," MIT's Technology Review, May 11, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_051105madden.asp?trk=nl
Center for Labor Research and Education (focus is on southern California)
---
http://www.labor.ucla.edu/
Two elected trustees at Dartmouth vow to keep faculty
members focused on teaching rather than research
Peter Robinson, one of the victors,
is a fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His platform called for promoting free speech on
campus, keeping faculty members focused on teaching rather
than research, improving an athletic program that he said
was “sunk in mediocrity,” and ending programs that require
fraternity members to attend “inclusivity” seminars. A
former speechwriter for President Reagan, Robinson wrote to
alumni: “After watching the fortieth chief executive of the
United States stand up to the Kremlin, I’d be perfectly
happy to stand up to the bureaucracy in Hanover.”
Stu Gettleman, "Renegade Trustees at Dartmouth,"
Inside
Higher Ed, May 13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/13/dartmouth
Blog ridicules and harasses students and faculty
members
St. Lawrence University is trying
to force disclosure of the names of bloggers behind a site
they say ridicules and harasses students and faculty
members. The blog
Take Back Our Campus!, which
says it is “dedicated to fighting the right-wing assault” on
the university, posts often raging criticisms of
administrative policy and of students in conservative
groups, and other faculty members and students they consider
conservative. The university filed a lawsuit in federal
court in January alleging that the blog unlawfully used, and
altered, copyrighted photographs. One picture of President
Daniel Sullivan, gleaned from the university’s Web site, was
spruced up with a bottle of gin and two bare-breasted women.
The pictures have been removed, but the conflict continues.
David Epstein, "Cloaked in Cyberspace," Inside Higher Ed,
May 13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/13/lawrence
An innovative method of accounting for employee stock options.
The question is whether employees take a hit and how much the hit becomes if
they must eventually exercise options at less than full market value. Of
course the company might issue more options to them to make up the
difference which it seems to me defeats the purpose somewhat.
When the new rules regarding the expensing of
options go into effect over the next year, technology firms, like Cisco
Systems Inc., will be among the hardest hit. Billions of dollars are stake
in Silicon Valley with its high concentration of technology firms. But
unlike other firms that are scrambling to meet the new requirements in the
next fiscal year, Cisco is seeking approval from the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) for an innovative method of accounting for employee stock
options. The new method was proposed to the SEC by Cisco in March, 2005, an
anonymous source told MarketWatch. The plan calls for Cisco to sell a small
number of option-backed securities through an investment bank each time the
company issues stock options to employees. The securities, which would be
available only to large institutional investors, would carry the same terms
and restrictions as employee stock options. These securities would be priced
using the same Dutch method used by Google, Inc. for its initial stock sale
last year, however, the restrictions are expected to reduce the value of the
securities. Cisco would account for options issued at the same time at the
same price as the securities, rather than at the price as it would be set
under current rules. It is anticipated that since the price would be lower
the dent made in earnings by expensing the options would also be reduced.
“In order to get an accurate valuations for stock option valuation, Cisco is
working on a market instrument that would match the same attributes of an
employee stock option,” Cisco said in a statement to MarketWatch on
Thursday. “We are awaiting guidance from regulators on this instrument.” In
response to a reporter’s question, William Donaldson, chairman of the SEC
said: “I think it’s a very interesting approach.”
"Cisco Proposes Option for Options," AccountingWeb, May 13, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100901
As you may recall, Cisco and other companies in the past have taken a
tremendous advantage of a discrepancy between GAAP rules and tax rules prior
to the revised FAS 123 due to be implemented next year.
When the options are exercised there is cash foregone rather than a cash
outlay. The company simply issues stock for cash at the exercise price and
foregoes the intrinsic value (the difference between the market value and
the exercise price). In spite of fact that cash never flows for intrinsic
value of employee stock options, Cisco has enjoyed a tremendous tax break
(millions in some years and over a billion in at least one other year) in
tax deductions for the cash foregone. In other words, a company like Cisco
might report over $1 billion in net profit to shareholders and a net loss to
the IRS when requesting a a large tax refund. The revised FAS 123
eliminates the intrinsic method of GAAP accounting for stock options and
forces fair value to be expensed at the time of vesting. Now Cisco is
proposing a method of reducing the reported “fair value.”
Bob Jensen’s threads and illustrations of employee stock option
accounting are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm
The following Tidbits were
forwarded by my secretary, Debbie Bowling, on May 13, 2005
Debbie is helping me with Tidbits this summer.
U.S. Plans Antitrust Suit Over
Real-Estate Listings
In a widening
push to promote price competition in sales of residential real estate,
government antitrust enforcers are preparing to sue the National Association
of Realtors, alleging that its policies will illegally restrict discounting
of sales commissions and put online competitors at a disadvantage. The move,
the latest effort by the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission
aimed at protecting buyers and sellers of homes, could help take some of the
sting from high real-estate costs. It comes as a hot housing market has
caused prices to surge, sharply boosting income for brokers and sales
agents, whose commissions typically amount to 5% to 6% of the sale price.
JOHN R. WILKE and JAMES R. HAGERTY,
"U.S.
Plans Antitrust Suit Over Real-Estate Listings,"
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL,
May 9, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://snipurl.com/Antitrust
SEC Judge Jolts Electric-Power
Industry
Ruling Against AEP's 2000 Merger
With Texas Firm Dusts Off Depression-Era Utility Law
A Securities
and Exchange Commission hearing judge's recent decision challenging the
legality of a $6.6 billion utility merger has sent a shudder through the
U.S. electric-power industry, which is worried that a largely ignored
Depression-era law limiting big utility mergers is back from the dead. On
May 3, an administrative law judge at the SEC issued a decision concluding
that the acquisition by Ohio's
American Electric Power Co. of Central &
South West Corp. of Texas -- which created the U.S.'s most sweeping utility
company in June 2000 -- violated a key provision of a 1935 law.
Specifically, Administrative Law Judge Robert G. Mahony found that the
merged company didn't constitute an integrated-utility system operating in a
"single area or region," as the U.S.'s Public Utility Holding Company Act
requires. Instead, he concluded that the utility, stretching from Virginia
to Michigan to Texas and spanning 11 states, operates over at least four
distinct regions. It is unclear what the SEC's remedy might be, but it is
likely that hearings on the merger will be held. ---The Public Utility
Holding Company Act remains one of the most important pieces of utility
legislation ever passed by Congress. It was created shortly after the 1929
stock-market crash exposed the financial chicanery and self dealing that had
become rampant in the electric-power industry, which at the time was
controlled by a handful of gigantic power trusts. The 1935 act broke up the
trusts and restricted future mergers. For years, those provisions pretty
much confined mergers to nearby utilities.
REBECCA SMITH,
"SEC Judge Jolts
Electric-Power Industry,"
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL,
May 9, 2005; Page B2
http://snipurl.com/wsjmark0509
Times Panel Proposes Steps to Build Credibility
In order to build readers' confidence, an
internal committee at The
New York Times has
recommended taking a variety of steps, including having senior editors write
more regularly about the workings of the paper, tracking errors in a
systematic way and responding more assertively to the paper's critics.
...The committee, which was charged last fall by Bill Keller, the executive
editor, with examining how the paper could increase readers' trust, said
there was "an immense amount that we can do to improve our journalism." ...
It also said The Times had discussed plagiarism-detection with Lexis-Nexis,
which was working with iThenticate, a firm that develops detection software
for use in academia. Once the software is refined, the committee said, The
Times should use it when plausible suspicions are raised.
KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, "Times Panel Proposes Steps to Build Credibility,"
THE NEW YORK TIMES BUSINESS, May 9, 2005
http://snipurl.com/nyt0509
Firefox Develops Security Holes
Firefox seems to be heading Internet Explorer's way
with security research company Secunia stating on its website that two
vulnerabilities found in the popular browser can be exploited to conduct
cross-site scripting attacks and compromise a user's system. ... According
to Secunia the problem is that "IFRAME" JavaScript URLs are not properly
protected from being executed in context of another URL in the history list.
This can be exploited to execute arbitrary HTML and script code in a user's
browser session in context of an arbitrary site. ... It seems that input
passed to the "IconURL" parameter in "InstallTrigger.install" is not
properly verified before being used. This can be exploited to execute
arbitrary JavaScript code with escalated privileges via a specially crafted
JavaScript URL.
A temporary solution has been added to the sites "update.mozilla.org" and "addons.mozilla.org"
where requests are redirected to "do-not-add.mozilla.org". ...This will stop
the publicly available exploit code using a combination of the
vulnerabilities to execute arbitrary code in the default settings of Firefox.
By
holymoly, "Firefox
Develops Security Holes,"
Free Republic, Posted on
05/09/2005 7:00:15 AM PDT
http://snipurl.com/firefox0509
Top IT Challenge: Paying for It
Finance remains the top issue for information
technology in higher education, according to an annual
survey of
institutions by Educause. But security issues are becoming more and more
important. Since 2000, Educause has conducted a poll of institutions —
typically answered by chief information officers — about their priorities
and about the issues they think have the potential to become more important.
Finance has consistently been a top ranked issue, and was the No. 1 answer
this year and last to the question of the issue that must be resolved to
assure the institution’s strategic success. The CIO’s ranked the following
as the top 10 issues for their institution’s success:
- Funding IT
- Security and information management
- Administrative information systems
- Strategic planning
- Infrastructure management
- Faculty development, support and training
- E-learning, distributed teaching and
learning
- Governance and leadership for IT
- Enterprise-level portals
- Web systems and services
Scott Jaschik "Top IT Challenge: Paying for It," Inside Higher ED,
May 9, 2005
http://snipurl.com/findit0509
Time Travelers Welcome at MIT
If John Titor was at
the Time Traveler Convention last Saturday night at MIT, he kept a low
profile.
Titor, the notorious internet
discussion group member who claims to be from the year 2036, was among those
invited to the
convention, where any
time traveler would have been ushered in as an honored guest. The
convention, which drew more than 400 people from our present time period,
was held at MIT's storied East Campus dormitory. It featured an MIT rock
band, called the Hong Kong Regulars, and hilarious lectures by MIT physics
professors. The profs were treated like pop stars by attendees fascinated by
the possibility of traveling back in time.
By
Mark Baard, "Time Travelers Welcome at
MIT," Wired News, 02:00 AM May. 09,
2005 PT
http://snipurl.com/topit0509
Hedge Funds Hit Rocky Stretch As
Field Becomes More Crowded
Hedge funds,
the large private investment pools that have exploded in popularity this
decade, have hit their most challenging performance stretch in at least a
year, raising questions about whether their growth may be slowing and what
that could mean for global stock and bond markets. ... Hedge-fund managers
make most of their profit from their investment gains, typically claiming a
hefty 20%. Without any gains, some funds could quickly lose key employees or
assets, if investors start demanding their money back. Some investors and
hedge-fund veterans wonder whether the industry is poised for a slowdown
after years of runaway growth.
"My question is how many hedge
funds will pack it in," says Marc Freed, a managing director at Lyster
Watson & Co., which invests in dozens of hedge funds on behalf of both
individual and institutional clients. Mr. Freed notes that those funds that
lost in April may have trouble making up those losses in a challenging
market. That will be a key test. Similar scares appeared in the spring of
2003 and 2004, but were overcome. Some industry experts say the difference
now is that interest rates are higher and many hedge funds themselves are
relatively newer, with limited experience.
GREGORY ZUCKERMAN and HENNY SENDER Staff Reporters,
"Hedge Funds Hit Rocky Stretch As Field
Becomes More Crowded,"
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL,
May 10, 2005; Page A1
http://snipurl.com/rocky0510
Swartz Says He Was Unaware
Forgiven Loans Weren't on W-2
Mark H. Swartz,
Tyco International
Ltd.'s former chief financial officer, testified Monday that he first
learned in summer 2002 that millions of dollars in loan forgiveness he
received in 1999 weren't included on his W-2 tax form for that year.
Prosecutors have alleged Messrs. Kozlowski and Swartz
improperly granted more than $37 million in loan forgiveness to themselves
as a bonus in 1999 without approval of Tyco's board of directors or its
compensation committee. Mr. Swartz, 44 years old, and Mr. Kozlowski, 58, are
on trial in New York State Supreme Court, facing charges of grand larceny,
securities fraud and other crimes in connection with giant bonuses and other
compensation they received while working as Tyco's top executives. They each
face up to 25 years in prison on the most serious charge of grand larceny.
They have denied wrongdoing. Their first trial ended in a mistrial last
year.
CHAD BRAY, "Swartz Says He Was Unaware Forgiven Loans
Weren't on W-2,"
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES,
May 10, 2005; Page C2
http://snipurl.com/swartz0510
Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by
Investigators
The incident seemed
alarming enough: a breach of a
Cisco Systems network
in which an intruder seized programming instructions for many of the
computers that control the flow of the Internet. Now federal officials and
computer security investigators have acknowledged that the Cisco break-in
last year was only part of a more extensive operation - involving a single
intruder or a small band, apparently based in Europe - in which thousands of
computer systems were similarly penetrated. ... Investigators in the United
States and Europe say they have spent almost a year pursuing the case
involving attacks on computer systems serving the American military, NASA
and research laboratories.
The case remains under investigation. But
attention is focused on a 16-year-old in Uppsala, Sweden, who was charged in
March with breaking into university computers in his hometown. Investigators
in the American break-ins ultimately traced the intrusions back to the
Uppsala university network. The F.B.I. and the Swedish police said they were
working together on the case, and one F.B.I. official said efforts in
Britain and other countries were aimed at identifying accomplices. "As a
result of recent actions" by law enforcement, an F.B.I. statement said, "the
criminal activity appears to have stopped."
JOHN MARKOFF and
LOWELL BERGMAN,
"Internet Attack
Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators," The New York Times,
Published: May 10, 2005
http://snipurl.com/cisco0510
Nokia to Set Specs for Mobile TV Handsets
Nokia Corp. will release technical details
about its mobile TV system to help service providers offer customers the
possibility of watching television on their handsets, with commercial TV
services expected to begin in 2006. The technology has been piloted in
several countries, including Finland where Nokia last month joined major TV
companies and mobile service providers to enable 500 test users in the
Helsinki region to watch international television broadcasts and tune in to
radio programs on their phones. ... In earlier research, Nokia said people
like to watch mobile TV in cars and public places, such as cafes. Watching
TV on handsets was also common at home and in workplaces, with test users
mostly interested in news, weather, sports, current affairs and
entertainment.
MATTI HUUHTANEN, "Nokia to Set Specs for Mobile TV Handsets," The
Washington Post," Tuesday, May 10, 2005; 7:54 AM
http://snipurl.com/Nokia0510
Eat Fat to Lose Fat
Diets too low in fat
may be responsible for stubborn bulges on bellies, thighs and butts,
according to a new study. Dieters trying slim down by following extremely
low-fat diets may be causing the exact opposite results, according to new
research from the University of Washington at St. Louis. Eating at least
small amounts of dietary fats, such as fish oils, might be a better way to
kick-start fat-burning, say researchers.
Extremes
of diet are sometimes unwise, because a balanced diet may be critical for
providing certain dietary signals that allow you to respond appropriately to
stresses, and one of those stresses is eating too much," said Dr. Clay
Semenkovich, a professor of medicine, cell biology and physiology at the
University of Washington and co-author of the study. ... The scientists also
tried a second approach to kick-start the fat-burning process in the
genetically engineered mice. They gave the mice a drug -- a stronger version
of human triglyceride-lowering medications that go by the trade names
Lopid and
Tricor. The drug the
researchers used, as well as those available on the market now, activate a
protein called PPAR-alpha, which extracts energy from carbohydrates and
fats. Researchers already knew that fat activates the protein, but the study
proved that PPAR-alpha specifically needs new fats to do its job.
Semenkovich and his colleagues were
surprised by their results.
By
Kristen Philipkoski, "Eat Fat to Lose Fat,"
Wired News,
02:00 AM May. 10, 2005
http://snipurl.com/fat0510
TidBits May 11, 2005
United Air Wins Right to Default on Its Employee Pension Plans
United Airlines, which is operating in
bankruptcy protection, received court permission yesterday to terminate its
four employee pension plans, setting off the largest pension default in the
three decades that the government has guaranteed pensions. ... The ruling
releases United, a unit of the UAL Corporation, from $3.2 billion in pension
obligations over the next five years. The federal agency that guarantees
pensions, the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation,
will assume responsibility for the plans, which cover about 134,000 people.
Some retirees could see sharply lower pension payments as a result; others
will see little change in benefits, depending on a variety of factors. Some
retirees at US Airways, which has terminated its plans, have seen benefits
drop by as much as 50 percent. Analysts have predicted that if United won
its case, there could be a domino effect as other airlines are forced to
seek bankruptcy protection to bring their pension costs down to United's
levels.
United plans to switch its current employees
from traditional retirement programs, which are called defined-benefit
plans, to defined-contribution plans like 401(k) programs. The federal
pension agency will assume responsibility for United's plans, which cover
about 134,000 workers.
MICHELINE MAYNARD, "United Air Wins Right to Default on Its
Employee Pension Plans," The New York Times, Published: May 11,
2005
http://snipurl.com/united0511
Tenure and Promotion Goes Crazy
Let’s begin with a riddle: When is Purdue
University to be preferred over Harvard? You might guess that there is an
agriculture or engineering program at Purdue that Harvard cannot match. But
we had something less rational in mind: namely, the annual spring ritual in
which department heads seek outside letters of evaluation for faculty
members being considered for tenure and promotion. A few years ago, a friend
of ours who played that role at a large public university experienced a
little more than the usual level of frustration. Like many higher education
administrators, the provost at this university had announced that outside
letters evaluating candidates for tenure had to be from “peer” institutions.
It is standard, though far from rational, for administrators to insist that
outside letter writers must come from schools at least as good, but the
short-lived pasha at this university added a less common caveat: the letters
should not be from either lessor or greater institutions. Based on the
institutional categories used at the time, there were 32 public research
universities sharing the institution’s rank. They were to be the only
acceptable sources of evaluation letters. Letters from Ivy League
universities or distinguished liberal arts colleges would not do. In a
choice between Purdue and Harvard, you’d best choose Purdue. ...
Our own universities are hardly unique in
employing such practices. Precisely because they are so common across the
academy, the time has come for a national meditation on the procedures
commonly associated with promotion and tenure. We begin with letters of
recommendation because they are one of the more conspicuous and egregious
components of a system in dire need of an overhaul. That’s what we want to
advocate here: a reform of the practices associated with awarding tenure and
promotion to younger faculty and an equally serious reform of the procedures
employed in promoting tenured associate professors to the rank of professor.
We are told that a faculty member at a liberal
arts college will not understand the standards at a major research
institution. Of course that is complete nonsense. The standards at major
schools are well known. Anyone actively participating in the profession will
fully understand the criteria for tenure at the best institutions. It’s the
standards at the other end of the spectrum — at small colleges with modest
or largely nonexistent expectations for publication — that are often
mysterious.
Cary Nelson and Stephen Watt "Tenure and Promotion Goes Crazy,"
Inside Higher Ed, May 11, 2005; read rest of the article at:
http://snipurl.com/tenure0511
Mercifully Light Microsoft Patch Tuesday
Today's monthly security update from Microsoft amounted
to just
one security patch for the Windows operating system.
It's a nice respite from
last month's deluge of patches, when Microsoft dumped a total of eight
fixes -- five of them "critical" -- to plug 18 different holes in its
software. Microsoft rated today's patch "important," which generally means
hackers could use it to break into vulnerable computers, but that at least
some action on the part of the victim would be required. The problem also is
mainly resident in certain versions of Windows 2000, which
is mostly used by businesses. The problem does appear to affect users of
Windows98, Windows SE and Windows ME, but those users may be out of luck:
Microsoft no longer offers support or patches for non-critical security
flaws in those operating systems. As always, free patches are available from
Microsoft's
Windows Update Web site (except for Windows 98, Windows 98SE, and
Windows ME users in this case.)
Brian Krebs on Computer Security, "Mercifully Light Microsoft Patch
Tuesday," The Washington Post, Posted at 03:35 PM ET, 05/10/2005
http://snipurl.com/fix0511
Human poop banned from meeting
Human poop banned from meeting: A man dressed up
as a giant piece of faeces has been refused entry to a government meeting in
Canada. James Skwarok arrived as 'Mr Floatie' to represent POOP, People
Opposed to Outfall Pollution, reports Canada.com. But the cross-party
meeting in Victoria-Beacon Hill refused him entry. Skwarok said he wanted to
protest against the daily dumping of 120 million litres of raw sewage into
the Pacific ocean. He said he was "a little bummed out" by the politicians'
refusal to meet him and that British Columbia province should look good for
the 2010 Olympics if it didn't want to get a "brown medal".
by
KidGlock, "Human
poop banned from meeting," Free Republic,
Posted on 05/11/2005 7:00:31 AM
End of Debbie's module on May 16
Music for the Quiet of Summer:
If You Ever Leave Me ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/if.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Update on Erika
Erika had her surgery on May 17 and remained in the hospital
until May 23. Now that the metal rack has been removed from her
spine, we are more optimistic about this surgery outcome than ever
before. She's still in considerable recovery pain with a 20-inch
incision, but the outlook is very good that she will have greatly
reduced permanent pain (if I can keep her from climbing ladders and
lifting heavy bags of dirt and fertilizer.) She's home now and
making great progress. Thank you for your prayers for her. She
will be able to travel with me to the American Accounting
Association annual meetings in San Francisco in early August. An
added incentive will be the chance to visit eight little
grandchildren nearby before the meetings begin.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
The next time you hear a politician casually use the word
"billion," think about whether you want that politician spending
your tax money.
A billion is a difficult number to comprehend, but one
advertising agency did a good job of putting that figure into
perspective in one of its releases.
A billion seconds ago it was 1959.
A billion minutes ago Jesus was alive.
A billion hours ago our ancestors were living in the Stone Age.
A billion days ago no-one walked on two feet on earth.
A billion dollars ago was only 8 hours and 20 minutes, at the
rate the government spends it.
"Avoid 'Pharming' Scams," The Wall Street Journal, May 24, 2005;
Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111688741618841089,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
The Problem:
An identify-theft technique called "pharming" is particularly hard to
detect.
The Solution:
With pharming, no matter what Web address you type in, scamsters are
able to redirect you to fraudulent Web pages where they then try to
capture your personal financial information. To protect yourself, if
you're using sites where you have to give over a credit-card number or
other sensitive data, make sure the sites are secure. One sign of
security: the Web address begins with "https:" not just "http:".
While other scams such as phishing and spyware
are still more prevalent, there is a danger that pharming will become
increasingly common, security experts say. That's because thieves alter
Internet routing information such that it appears as if you're still
going to the correct Web address. Another sign that you're on a secure
site: A small padlock icon will sometimes appear along the bottom edge
of the screen when you view a Web page.
Bob Jensen's threads on computer and network security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Paying for Health Care in the Emeritus Years
Fidelity Investments and Aetna announced a new
program Tuesday in which employees at a consortium of colleges will have the
chance to create special retirement accounts to pay for health care. The
Emeriti Program will be open to employees at the members of Emeriti
Retirement Health Solutions, a consortium of colleges that aims for more
clout in negotiating with benefits companies by combining the employees of
their institutions. Most of the 29 members are private liberal arts
colleges, although scores of other institutions are considering joining, and
membership will not be restricted to certain types of colleges. Under the
program, employers and employees could make voluntary contributions to
special accounts with the employer contributions not taxed. The funds are
then invested, and upon retirement, employees can select among several
insurance plans to supplement their Medicare coverage. Besides paying for
the supplemental coverage, the accounts can also be used to pay for some
out-of-pocket medical expenses not covered by either Medicare or the
additional health insurance.
Scott Jaschik, "Paying for Health Care in the Emeritus Years," Inside
Higher Ed,May 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/25/health
Getting Drunk = Getting Hurt, Study Finds
College students who get drunk regularly are
likelier than other students — even those who drink alcohol — to physically
injure themselves, or to be hurt by other drinkers, according to researchers
at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. In a study presented
Monday at the annual meeting of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine,
the researchers found that students who acknowledged being drunk at least
once a week were three times likelier to be hurt or injured because of their
own drinking than were students who drink alcohol but do not get drunk
weekly. Such students were also twice as likely to fall and need medical
care and 75 percent more likely to be “sexually victimized.” (The question
posed to the students defined getting drunk as “being unsteady, dizzy, or
sick to your stomach.") Students who said they got drunk once a week were
also more susceptible to being hurt by others — three times more likely, for
instance, to be in an “automobile accident caused by someone else’s
drinking,” and twice as likely “to be taken advantage of sexually by someone
who was drinking.” Mary Claire O’Brien, a physician and assistant professor
of emergency medicine and public health sciences at the Wake Forest medical
center, said in an interview Tuesday that the study’s goal was to try to
identify a single question that college medical centers and student health
officials could ask incoming patients to help identify potentially at-risk
students.
Doug Lederman, "Getting Drunk = Getting Hurt, Study Finds," Inside Higher
Ed, May 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/25/drunk
Cheaper Sex: Germany's discounted price cure for mental depression
Germans on the dole are being offered a 20 per cent discount at
brothels. People looking for the discount sex just need to show their
unemployment benefit card to qualify for the reductions. Brothel manager
Silvia Rau who runs the Villa Bijou bar in Dresden said that the previous
average number of 150 guests per week has sunk to 80 in recent months. She
hopes that the new policy will bring back the customers and also provide
them with some comfort in "difficult times". According to Rau, the
initiative came from the prostitutes' union, who proposed the discount
measure as a way of helping the long-term jobless out of their depression.
"Unemployed offered brothel discount," Ananova, May 23, 2005 ---
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1405448.html
Forget Your Troubles, Come On, Get Happy
Too Much Stress Affects Memory and Thinking Skills
Living under too much stress may harm your brain as
well as your body. Previous studies have already shown that stress hormones,
such as cortisol, can increase the risk of heart disease and other ailments,
stress hormones, such as cortisol, can increase the risk of heart disease
and other ailments, but a new study shows that stress hormones may also
shrink the brain. Researchers found that older adults with high levels of
cortisol performed poorly on memory tests and had a smaller hippocampus, the
part of the brain responsible for learning and memory.
Jennifer Warner, "Long-Term Stress May Shrink the Brain: Too Much Stress
Affects Memory and Thinking Skills, WebMd, May 20, 2005 ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/106/108114.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_03
Class mobility in the U.S. remains frozen in place
The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times
featured stories over the last week about class and mobility in the United
States. Despite drawing on largely different research, the conclusions of
both features were the same. Overall class mobility has been coming to a
screeching halt. According the Journal, "... Americans are no more or less
likely to rise above, or fall below, their parents' economic class than they
were 35 years ago." The Times quotes similar data, while also pointing out
that at the same time the gap between rich and poor is increasing. From 1979
to 2001, after-tax income of the top 1 percent of American households
increased 139 percent, the middle fifth by 17 percent and poorest fifth by 9
percent. According to the research, whereas at one time parents' economic
status contributed by a factor of about 20 percent to where a child wound
up, today this is more in the range of 50 percent. In other words, in
today's America, the rewards for being born into the right circumstances and
the penalties for being born into the wrong circumstances are becoming
increasingly greater. Perhaps the operative question to ask is if
conventional American wisdom is wrong, and if a genuinely free, capitalist
society over time becomes increasingly less free and fair. Those born into
the right circumstances, whether those circumstances be the right parents or
the right genes, will evolve to the top and then the game is over.
Star Parker, "Pushing a formula for getting poor," WorldDailyNet, May
24, 2005 ---
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=44412
"The College Dropout Boom," The New York Times, May 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/24/national/class/EDUCATION-FINAL.html?
Medicaid may go soft on sex offenders
New York's comptroller urged the nation's top
health official Sunday to ban high-risk sex offenders and convicted rapists
from receiving Viagra paid for by Medicaid. "Federal, state and local
reimbursement for the cost of erectile dysfunction drugs for sex offenders
raises serious policy considerations and has the potential to place the
public at risk," Comptroller Alan Hevesi wrote Michael Leavitt, secretary of
Health and Human Services.
"Sex offenders get Viagra paid for by Medicaid," CNN, May 23, 2005
---
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/05/23/offenders.viagra/
Some news outlets "magnify every mistake the military makes in order
to hammer the Bush administration"
The bashing of Newsweek over its horribly handled
item on Koran desecration has mushroomed into a sweeping indictment of the
media, which some conservatives now accuse of deliberately slandering the
military. Newsweek "wanted the story to be true," says Rush Limbaugh,
because the media "have an adversarial relationship with America" and "end
up siding with the bad guys." Some news outlets "magnify every mistake the
military makes in order to hammer the Bush administration," says Bill
O'Reilly. The Wall Street Journal editorial page blames "a basic media
mistrust of the military that goes back to Vietnam." Columnist Jonah
Goldberg decries "the media's unreflective willingness to undermine the war
on terror."
Howard Kurtz, "Media vs. the Military," The Washington Post,
May 23, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/blog/2005/03/23/BL2005040701384.html
U.K. State schools 'failing brightest pupils'
The brightest children in the country are being let
down by (United Kingdom) state schools,
according to research conducted for a government advisory body. The study
found that children in the top 5% nationally for their academic ability do
far better in schools where they are grouped together. But in schools
without many such pupils, bright children score much lower in exams,
according to the study for the Specialist Schools Trust. Professor David
Jesson, from York University, tracked the progress of 28,000 children in
England who received the highest marks in national English and maths tests
taken, aged 11, in 1999.
"State schools 'failing brightest pupils' ," The Guardian,
May 23, 2005 ---
http://education.guardian.co.uk/schools/story/0,5500,1490391,00.html
Duke University Ends iPod Learning Experiment
After an internal review, the university recently
decided to scale back its iPod program, giving the device to freshmen,
juniors and seniors enrolled in classes that incorporate it into their
pedagogies. Sophomores will use the iPods they received in the 2004-05
academic year. Perhaps the most stinging criticism came from Duke’s
independent student newspaper, The Chronicle. An editorial Feb. 28 editorial
titled “iPod Program Did Not Deliver” proclaimed: “The much-hyped iPod
program — for which the University spent $500,000 on iPods for the entire
freshman class — was far from the overwhelming academic success the
university hoped for, and the experiment should not continue next year.” The
editorial criticized “the product itself,” noting that iPods are great
portable digital music players that “do not seem to translate well into
academic use and benefit few students.” That was my initial opinion, too,
along with that of a former university president for whom I used to work at
Ohio University and a virtual reality guru with whom I work now at Iowa
State University of Science and Technology.
Michael Bugeja, "The Medium Is the Moral," Inside Higher Ed, May 20,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/20/tech
Bob Jensen's threads on education technology is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Academics declare war on scholarly journal publication
fraud and oligopoly
Scholarly journals are finding their privileged
position as arbiters of academic excellence under attack. These days,
research is increasingly available on free university Web sites and through
start-up outfits . . . The 10-campus University of California system has
emerged as a hotbed of insurgency against this $5 billion global market.
Faculty members are competing against publishers with free or inexpensive
journals of their own. Two UC scientists organized a world-wide boycott
against a unit of Reed Elsevier -- the Anglo-Dutch giant that publishes
1,800 periodicals -- protesting its fees. The UC administration itself has
jumped into the fray. It's urging scholars to deposit working papers and
monographs into a free database in addition to submitting them for
publication elsewhere. It has also battled with publishers, including
nonprofits, to lower prices. "We have to take back control from the
publishers," says Daniel Greenstein, associate vice provost for the UC
system, which spends $30 million a year on scholarly periodicals. The clash
between academics and publishers was exacerbated last year when the
taxpayer-funded National Institutes of Health proposed that articles
resulting from NIH grants be made available free online. That prompted
protests from Reed Elsevier, John Wiley & Sons Inc. and several nonprofit
publishers such as the American Diabetes Association, which argued such a
move would hurt their businesses. The NIH retreated and in February made the
program voluntary. It now asks authors to post on an NIH Web site any
articles based on NIH grants within 12 months of publication.
Bernard Wysocki Jr., "Scholarly Journals' Premier Status Is Diluted by Web:
More Research Is Free Online Amid Spurt of Start-Ups; Publishers' Profits at
Risk A Revolt on UC's Campuses." The Wall Street Journal," May 23,
2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111680539102640247,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on scholarly journal publication fraud
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournals
I wonder if Donald has a module on how to get a casino
out of bankruptcy
Once you’ve done real estate, casinos, an
airline, and reality television, what’s left? For Donald Trump, there’s
always higher education. On Monday Trump unveiled his own “university,”
which will sell CD-ROMs and offer online courses in real estate and
business. No credit or degrees will be offered, although baseball caps and
shirts with the university logo may be purchased ($21.95 for a cap, $39.95
for a golf shirt). The courses? “The Wealth Builder’s Blueprint” ($396) is
the kickoff home study program, featuring CDs on such topics as “how to
master the mysteries of money” and “how to soar to the top of your career.”
Online courses ($300) are being offered on entrepreneurship, marketing and
real estate.
Scott Jaschik, "Donald Trump Founds ‘University’," Inside Higher Ed,
May 24, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/24/trump
There is no charge for donating organs
If the hospital billed your friend for any costs
associated with donating organs, then they made a mistake. The family of the
organ donor should never incur any expense associated with organ donation.
The family is only billed for costs associated with end-of-life care up to
the point that the patient is declared brain dead. After that, all costs
related to maintaining the viability of the organs, procurement of organs or
the subsequent transplant are paid for by the transplant center, which then
bills the recipient's insurance company. A family that is billed for costs
related to organ donation should contact their regional Organ Procurement
Organization, a nonprofit group that will help them resolve this or any
other issue related to organ donation. A list of OPOs by state can be found
at the Web site for the Association of Organ Procurement Organizations at
www.aopo.org .
"Health Mailbox," The Wall Street Journal, May 24, 2005, Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111688822051941104,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Financial Flashback
The Wall Street Journal, May 23, 1958
Congress handed the Administration its long-sought
postal rate increase, including the first boost for regular, first class
stamps in 25 years. First class stamps would cost 4 cents; airmail stamps, 7
cents; post cards, 3 cents; and air post cards, 5 cents.
Debbie added the following Tidbits
How to Succeed in Business, Without Really Succeeding
"How to Succeed in
Business, Without Really Succeeding,"
by Micheline Maynard, The New York Times, Published: May 15, 2005
http://snipurl.com/U0517
HERE'S a pop quiz
for you frequent fliers (and disgruntled investors and union members):
Who was the highest-paid executive at a major domestic airline last
year, taking home $1.1 million in salary and bonus? Not Gary C. Kelly at
Southwest: His reward for running the industry's most profitable company
was just $542,000. Nor was it Bruce Lakefield at US Airways, who got
$425,000 as his company struggled to avoid liquidation. And forget about
Gerald Grinstein at Delta, who earned a mere $250,000 as his airline
battled to stay out of bankruptcy protection. The big payday went to
Glenn F. Tilton, the chief executive of United Airlines, which has been
operating in bankruptcy since December 2002. Since its filing, it has
lost billions, forced its workers to take deep cuts in pay and benefits,
and dumped billions of dollars of unfunded pension obligations on the
federal government. And he is still not sure when United will get out of
bankruptcy.
Mr. Tilton's compensation has outraged some of
his workers, who want him to return his $366,000 bonus. (He did take a
pay cut last year, and is taking another this year.) But one could argue
that Mr. Tilton is worth every penny of his pay - even if his strategy
has not been out of a business school textbook.
In his time at United, which began shortly
before the airline filed for Chapter 11 protection, Mr. Tilton has -
wittingly or not - used bankruptcy protection as a competitive tool. And
he has gained respect in the industry, however grudgingly, for doing so.
Continued in article
What to Like About Base Closings.
What to Like About Base Closings...EDITORIAL, "The New York Times,
Published: May 15, 2005
http://snipurl.com/base0517
We have yet to meet the senator or
representative who liked the closing of a local military base. But
lawmakers who care about getting the most out of America's
half-trillion-dollar defense budget ought to be lining up behind the
Pentagon's recommendation on Friday to close more than 30 major domestic
bases and scores of smaller installations.
By closing and consolidating facilities it no
longer requires, the Pentagon would free about $5 billion a year for the
additional personnel and equipment it needs very badly. Frankly, we wish
the list of closed facilities had been even longer, as Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld had once indicated it would be.
The Pentagon avoided the political pain of
closing even more domestic bases by choosing to cut back too drastically
on its bases overseas, particularly in Europe. Many of those foreign
bases benefit from host nation subsidies, so shifting those troops home
will mean less potential savings. It also undermines military
efficiency, since bases in places like Germany are closer to likely
combat zones than those in Oklahoma or Kansas.
Still, the Pentagon deserves credit anytime it
musters the courage to redirect money from areas that are politically
popular but militarily redundant. We say that, recognizing that the
proposed cuts would cost thousands of local jobs in upstate New York, at
Fort Monmouth in New Jersey and at the Navy's submarine base in Groton,
Conn. Other regions have also been asked to bear their share of the
pain, including such solidly Republican states as Mississippi, where the
Pascagoula Naval Station, protected for many years by Trent Lott, now
faces closing.
Several further steps are needed to make these
cuts a reality, including review by an independent commission, followed
by a Congressional up-or-down vote on the final list later this year.
And seeing through these base closures is only the first part of the
challenge. The economic pain and job losses will be in vain unless the
Pentagon puts the money saved to good use. ... The war against military
pork must be fought on many fronts.
Continued in editorial
At Career Education, A Big
Shareholder Wages a Proxy Fight
A major shareholder of
Career Education
Corp., one of the nation's biggest operators of for-profit colleges, says he
thinks its management deserves to be expelled. Steve Bostic, who owns 1.1
million Career Education shares, is waging a proxy battle to remove top
executives and recoup the $60 million he figures he has lost over the past
year. He says the company has pushed too hard to enroll students, damaging
the colleges' quality and leading to government investigations and lawsuits
that have slashed the company's share price by more than half over the past
year. The 61-year-old retired entrepreneur amassed his Career Education
stake, currently about 1%, when he sold his own chain of schools to the
company in 2001. Career Education, based in Hoffman Estates, Ill., runs 81
colleges, universities and trade schools in the U.S. and abroad, including
Katharine Gibbs Schools. ... Last week, Career Education said a special
board committee, which had hired an outside law firm and accounting firm,
found no support for the class-action suit's allegations of securities
fraud, but did show "wrongful conduct by individual employees of the
company," while adding that it "was not directed or orchestrated by the
company's senior management." On Wall Street, the company, as well as other
for-profit education chains, has been one of the favorite targets of
short-sellers, investors who bet that shares will fall. But the company's
rapid growth also has attracted money from some of the nation's biggest and
most respected money managers, including Fidelity Investments and Bill
Miller, manager of
Legg Mason Value Trust,
according to year-end securities filings. Through a spokesman, Mr. Miller
declined to comment, as did Fidelity.
JOHN HECHINGER, "At
Career Education, A Big Shareholder Wages a Proxy Fight," The
Wall Street Journal,"
May 17, 2005; Page C1
http://snipurl.com/career0517
Thief at Christian store troubled by
conscience
"Thief
at Christian store troubled by conscience," by Dave Newbart,
Free Republic, Posted on 05/17/2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/thief0517
In his 24 years running a Christian bookstore in
Oak Park, Bob Walsh chalked up thousands of dollars in losses to
shoplifters. The thieves even went as far as taking cases of
leather-bound Bibles.
That's why Walsh was stunned last week when a
padded envelope arrived in the mail. Inside was $2,000 -- 20 $100 bills,
to be exact -- and an apology.
"This is money for the items I stole from your
store many years ago," the note read. "I'm very sorry."
Walsh, who with his wife, Marietta, owned Logos
Bookstore from 1977 until 2001, said he was taken aback.
"Whoever heard of paying back for something
that you stole?" he said. "Maybe someone who stole one of those Bibles
actually read it."
Target of professional ring?
Walsh said he has no idea who sent the letter.
Although it contained a Chicago postmark, it was unsigned. The thief
spelled Walsh's last name wrong, but knew enough to send it to Walsh's
home address as opposed to the store, which he no longer owns. Now
retired, Walsh, 76, lives in Oak Park with Marietta, 73.
He does not suspect any of the 100 workers he
employed over the years, although he said he knows of at least three who
ripped off the store. One employee even returned a box of items swiped
while on the job.
Theft from the store was particularly bad a
decade ago, when Walsh suspects the store was the target of a
professional ring. The store finally installed a detection system, which
cut down on the problem. But with typically only a few workers in the
store at any one time, thieves sometimes got away with entire shelves of
merchandise.
Wife wants to give it to charity
Still, the business was profitable, and at one
time it was the busiest of 60 Logos stores nationwide. The losses were
just something written off the bottom line.
Walsh said his wife plans to do something
charitable with her $1,000 cut.
"She's says it's found money and we should give
it away," he said.
Walsh found a more practical use: On the same
day the money arrived, he received a hefty bill for a new heating and
cooling unit.
Continued in article
Turnaround for Women at Harvard
"Turnaround for Women at
Harvard," by Scott Jaschik,
Inside Higher Ed, May 17,
http://snipurl.com/harv0517
Four months after
Lawrence H. Summers infuriated women with his comments on female
scientists, he pledged at least $50 million to support the kinds of
programs that he once suggested would have little impact.
Harvard University on Monday
released the
reports of two committees created in the wake of the Summers
talk in January,
which questioned whether women face discrimination in the sciences and
suggested that women may be less talent than men in the field. The
reports, which Summers
praised, outlined
a series of failings at Harvard that hold back female faculty members,
especially in the sciences.
The recommendations in the reports are similar
to the kinds of programs already in place at many other universities and
that experts say are needed to encourage female scientists. The reports
call for new mentoring programs, efforts to identify and encourage
undergraduates in the sciences, more flexibility about the tenure clock
and better balance of work and family life.
Summers did not endorse every element of the
plans, saying that they needed study and input from many at the
university. But he said that this study should be speedy and that he was
willing to find funds on top of the $50 million as needed to support the
efforts. He also said he would start a search now to fill a new position
that was recommended by one of the committees: senior vice provost for
diversity and faculty development. This new position will be part of
Harvard’s central administration and will work with the president and
provost to oversee faculty appointments throughout Harvard and to find
ways to promote gender, racial and ethnic equity on the faculty.
The new position was recommended by the task
force charged with looking at conditions for women on Harvard’s faculty.
The other task force focused on women in science and engineering. The
latter panel specifically rejected the idea from the January Summers
talk that women in science no longer face discrimination.
“Unfortunately, in some departments, women
graduate students and postdoctoral fellows report hearing disrespectful
criticisms of their abilities from male colleagues and a lack of a
supportive environment,” the report said. “Although some female students
and postdoctoral fellows of all disciplines face these problems, the
problem is especially acute in certain departments, where women are
rare, isolated, and sometimes poorly supported.”
The following are some of the recommendations
of the panel on women on the faculty:
- Creating a fund to support the hiring of
faculty members who would add to the diversity of the faculty.
- Improving university-wide data collection
on faculty demographics and the use of surveys to measure attitudes
of members of certain groups about how they are treated by the
university.
- Starting new “dual career” programs to
help find professional opportunities for the partners of faculty
members.
- Changing policies to promote a healthy
work and family balance. Specifically, the committee urged Harvard
to look at policies related to the “tenure clock” and support for
family leaves.
The following are some of the recommendations
of the panel on women and science:
- Creating summer research programs and
study centers to encourage undergraduate women in the sciences.
- Adding formal mentoring roles for senior
faculty to help develop new scientific talent — from the
undergraduate to junior faculty levels.
- Providing special research support to
scientists who have added responsibilities of child care.
- Creating programs on diversity for
department chairs.
ISSUE IN DEPTH:
CLASS MATTERS WORD OF THE DAY
Today's word:
taciturn
temperamentally disinclined to talk : silent
· (adjective)
The word taciturn
has appeared in 53 Times articles over the past year.
Definitions provided by: Merriam-Webster, The New York Times,
May 19, 2005
http://snipurl.com/word0519
E-Mailers Anonymous
Ever want to send an anonymous comment without
your e-mail address giving you away? Here's a site that does just that--plus
new ways to protect your privacy, whether you're surfing the Web or talking
on the phone.
THEANONYMOUSEMAIL.COM
You can use this $20-per-year service to send
e-mails that no one can trace back to you. The recipients can reply and even
block you, but they can't see who you are. Of course, one person's secret
admirer could be another person's stalker. Although the service doesn't
monitor messages, it will disclose your identity if a court asks for it or
to "protect any persons ... from imminent harm."
WILSON ROTHMAN "E-Mailers Anonymous," Time Magazine,
Posted Monday, May. 23, 2005
http://snipurl.com/anon0519
Tax Season Boosts Intuit's
Income
Intuit
Inc. said fiscal third-quarter net income rose 14%, thanks to strong
consumer demand during the tax season and a 20% jump in revenue, driven in
part by sales of its QuickBooks accounting software. For the quarter ended
April 30, the Mountain View, Calif., maker of Turbo-Tax and other
personal-finance software posted net income of $300.5 million, or $1.61 a
share, compared with $264 million, or $1.33 a share, a year earlier. Revenue
climbed to $849.5 million from $709.8 million. Intuit said it has decided to
sell its information technology solutions business, saying it has identified
"better investment opportunities" in its core business. That business
contributed $42.3 million in revenue for the first three fiscal quarters.
Intuit said its board authorized a three-year $500 million stock buyback.
Dow Jones Newswires, "Tax
Season Boosts Intuit's Income," The Wall Street Journal
Online, May 19, 2005; Page A11---
http://snipurl.com/intuit0519
Summer Concerts Try New Tactics
to Fill Seats
After a Dismal Last Season,
Industry Lowers Some Prices Seeing the
Eagles for $25
"Summer Concerts Try New Tactics to Fill Seats,
by Ethan Smith, "The Wall Street Journal,
May 19, 2005; Page D1
http://snipurl.com/concerts0519
Many in
the music business called 2004 the worst summer concert season in
memory: fans were stuck with high prices and promoters lost money and
canceled shows.
With this year's season about to
kick off, event promoters and artist representatives have vowed to turn
things around. So, they are offering a variety of inducements, including
lower prices and offering more bands for the money by packaging big acts
together at one show. Promoters are also blitzing fans with emails and
text messages to try and generate interest in coming shows.
While prices for the best seats
continue to be sky high, a big priority this year is making sure that
the cheap seats are actually cheap. Last year, the inability to put fans
in those back-of-the-house seats contributed mightily to a string of
underperforming tours and concert cancellations. So this year, for
example, the Eagles have aggressively promoted $25 seats at some stops
on their coming tour; top-priced tickets are selling for $175.
Younger acts have made a point of
keeping prices low across the board. Punk-pop trio Green Day -- one of
the few young bands that can fill a stadium -- are seeing strong sales
with ticket prices mostly held to less than $50. The Dave Matthews Band
is charging less than $60 at most shows on its summer trek. Among the
other big acts on the road this summer: Coldplay, Avril Lavigne, Nine
Inch Nails and Alicia Keys.
The emphasis on affordable
tickets is a big change from last season. Last year, according to
Pollstar, a trade magazine that follows the concert business, the
average ticket price for the 100 top-grossing tours hit a record high of
$52.39, more than double the average seat in 1996. Even mediocre seats
for acts like Van Halen and Cher were on sale for up to $80 a ticket.
Unfortunately for the industry, the fans balked at the spiralling
prices. Weak sales forced the cancellation of show by artists including
Christina Aguilera and Marc Anthony.
High-priced tickets certainly
haven't vanished. The Rolling Stones' coming tour of stadiums, arenas,
and theaters, which kicks off Aug. 21 in Boston, will see top-end seats
going for more than $450. (The average ticket price at the stadium shows
is $90.) Michael Cohl, the band's tour director, says the high-priced
seats subsidize the others. "This is a way of making it work for
everybody," says Mr. Cohl. "The group and the wealthy people who can
afford the $400 seats and everybody else." As eye-popping as these
tickets are, selling them has never been much of a problem for big-name
acts: The first seven Rolling Stones shows put on sale, including
Boston, Washington, D.C., and Miami, are already sold out. ...
Promoters are also making more of
an effort to woo fans. IAC/InterActiveCorp's Ticketmaster, which sells
the bulk of seats for major tours, has launched a blizzard of email
messages, much of it aimed at known fans of a particular act. David
Goldberg, Ticketmaster's executive vice president of strategy and
business development, says: "This year we will probably send out over a
billion targeted email alerts." Some of the messages, such as an email
promoting Neil Diamond's tour this summer, are very sophisticated,
including a music player that lets recipients listen to a handful of
songs on their computer. ...
Continued in article
Will Graduation Dream Come True? (School
won't let Marine graduate in uniform)
Tony Perry, "Will
Graduation Dream Come True? (School won't let Marine graduate in uniform),"
Free Republic, Posted on
05/19/2005 7:52:10 AM PDT by
Cagey
http://snipurl.com/grad0519
SAN DIEGO — Steven Kiernan, 17, has two dreams:
One is to become a Marine, and the other is to wear his Marine
dress-blue uniform to his high school graduation.
Kiernan is close to achieving the first. He has
finished all but the final days of the grueling 12-week boot camp in San
Diego.
But his goal of wearing his uniform to Petaluma
High School's graduation on June 11 appears thwarted.
The principal of the Northern California school
notified Kiernan's parents that school rules require that all graduates
wear the traditional cap and gown.
Jim Kiernan, Steven's father, plans to appeal
the decision to the Petaluma school board at its meeting Tuesday.
"The Marine Corps has traditions, but I guess
the school district has traditions too, and the different traditions
have collided," he said in a telephone interview.
Jim Kiernan, who works for a vineyard
management company, said he was not so much angered by the decision as
he was puzzled. Other graduates, he said, will be honored for their
achievements, by wearing adornments on their caps or having their names
read aloud.
"Finishing boot camp is my son's achievement,
and I think he deserves to be honored too," Jim Kiernan said. He's a
member of another school board in Sonoma County and says he knows that
school boards can overrule principals.
In similar cases this spring involving young
Marines returning to their high school graduations in Illinois and
Wisconsin, school officials lifted the no-uniforms rule.
Steven finished his course work early at
Petaluma High so he could start boot camp. His parents, somewhat
reluctantly, signed his enlistment papers.
Principal Mike Simpson said he sympathized with
Steven and respects his decision to enlist. Simpson's father was a
Marine who saw combat in World War II. ...
(Excerpt)
Read more at
latimes.com ...
Give Your DVD Player the Finger
"Give
Your DVD Player the Finger," by Katie Dean, Wired News, May. 19, 2005
---
http://snipurl.com/finger0519
Researchers in Los Angeles are developing
a new form of piracy protection for DVDs that could make common
practices like loaning a movie to a friend impossible.
University of California at Los Angeles
engineering professor
Rajit Gadh is
leading
research to turn
radio frequency identification, or RFID, tags into an extremely
restrictive form of digital rights management to protect DVD movies.
RFID tags have been called "wireless bar codes"
-- though they hold more data -- and are commonly used for things like
ID badges or keeping track of inventory in a retail store or hospital.
RFID tags are usually read by a wireless data
reader, the proposed DVD-protection scheme would make no use of RFID's
wireless capabilities.
Rather, the researchers are interested in the
ability to write data to the tags, which can't be done on a DVD once
it's been burned.
Here's how the system might work:
At the store, someone buying a new DVD would
have to provide a password or some kind of biometric data, like a
fingerprint or iris scan, which would be added to the DVD's RFID tag.
Then, when the DVD was popped into a specially
equipped DVD player, the viewer would be required to re-enter his or her
password or fingerprint. The system would require consumers to buy new
DVD players with RFID readers.
Gadh said his research group is trying to
address the problem of piracy for the movie industry.
"Content owners would like to have extremely
tight control on the content so they can maximize revenue," Gadh said.
"Users want to move stuff around."
Gadh said the proposed system is "absolutely"
more restrictive to users than anti-copying methods already used to
protect DVDs.
"By definition this is a restrictive form (of
digital rights management)," Gadh said.
Most DVDs are already encrypted with an
anti-copying mechanism called
Content-Scrambling System.
The encryption has been broken, however, and programs to descramble DVDs
can be found all over the internet.
DVDs are also "region coded" so that discs sold
in the United States, for instance, cannot be played in the United
Kingdom. The region coding gives the movie studios control over where
and when films are released on DVD.
Ed Felten, a
computer science professor at Princeton University, called the proposal
the "limit of restrictiveness."
"I think people would find it creepy to give
their fingerprint every time they wanted to play a DVD," Felten said.
"It's hard to think that would be acceptable to customers."
He said it seems unlikely that people would buy
new DVD players with RFID readers in order to purchase DVDs that are
less functional.
Privacy advocates have expressed concern about
RFID technology because the tags can tie products to individuals,
potentially without their knowledge.
Seth Schoen, staff technologist at the
Electronic Frontier Foundation,
said it's unlikely this DRM plan will be any more effective than others
preceding it.
"It only requires one person to break it,"
Schoen said.
Schoen said this is the "smart cow problem":
Once one of the cows opens the gate, the others will follow.
The Shrinking Tenure Track
"The Shrinking Tenure Track," by Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed,
May 19,
http://snipurl.com/ten0519
Between 2001 and 2003, higher education saw
healthy increases in the number of faculty jobs, which grew to 1,173,556
from 1,113,183.
But if you’re wondering why those 60,000 new
jobs didn’t ease your job search, it may be because the growth was
greatest for part-time positions. And by sector, the largest growth was
in for-profit higher education.
These results are from an annual federal report
on staffing at colleges and universities. The
report, released
Wednesday, covers the fall of 2003, the most recent year for which data
are available. Comparisons to prior years’ reports offer some sense of
the movement of academic positions.
Between 2001 and 2003, the number of full-time
faculty jobs at degree-granting institutions rose to 630,419, from
617,868 — a gain of 12,551 jobs. But the number of part-time jobs rose
to 543,137, up from 495,315 — a gain of 47,822 jobs. And as a percentage
of faculty jobs at degree granting institutions, part-time positions
increased to 46 percent, from 44 percent, over those two years.
Anecdotal reports suggest that the increase has continued since then.
The growth in jobs was also uneven among
sectors.
Sector |
Faculty Jobs, 2003 |
Faculty Jobs, 2001 |
% Change |
Public |
791,384 |
771,124 |
+3% |
Private, nonprofit |
330,443 |
306,487 |
+8% |
For-profit |
51,729 |
35,572 |
+46% |
Another way to examine academic workplace
trends is to look at the new full-time hires at degree-granting
institutions, as the report did for the fall of 2003. Those data show
that there were more secretarial and clerical jobs filled that year than
there were tenure-track faculty positions. The following is the
breakdown for the 126,521 new full-time jobs:
New Full-Time Hires at Degree Granting
Institutions, Fall 2003
Job Category |
Number of Hires |
Faculty total |
45,003 |
With tenure |
1,806 |
On tenure track |
16,830 |
Not on tenure track |
26,387 |
Executive/managerial |
6,930 |
Other professional (support services) |
35,083 |
Technical and paraprofessional |
9,599 |
Clerical and secretarial |
17,890 |
Skilled crafts |
1,436 |
Service and maintenance |
10,580 |
The report contains pages of data about
employees of colleges and universities. Some of the data, such as that
on salaries, is already dated compared to that released by other
studies. But on many issues, the report provides a snapshot of the
professoriate, even if it is two years out of date. Among the findings
for fall 2003:
- Men held 61 percent of full-time faculty
positions.
- Three states — California, New York and
Texas — have more than 40,000 full-time faculty members, while
full-time faculty jobs fall below 2,000 in three states: Alaska,
Delaware and Wyoming.
- Of full-time faculty members, about 45
percent are tenured and another 20 percent are on the tenure track.
- Full-time faculty members are most likely
to be tenured at public institutions (48 percent), followed by
private nonprofit institutions (40 percent) and for-profit colleges
(3 percent).
- Within public higher education, full-time
faculty members are more likely to be tenured at four-year
institutions (50 percent) than at two-year institutions (43
percent).
- A greater proportion of male full-time
faculty members (50 percent) than women (36 percent) is tenured.
- A greater proportion of white full-time
faculty members (47 percent) is tenured than are members of other
ethnic groups: Asian (42 percent), Hispanic (41 percent), black (38
percent).
KAREN MATTHEWS, "Trump Unveils Launch of Trump
University," ABC News Business, May 23,
2005,
http://snipurl.com/trump0523
Rocker Jeff Baxter Moves and
Shakes In National Security
"Rocker Jeff Baxter Moves
and Shakes In National Security, by Yochi J. Dreazen," The Wall Street
Journal,
May 24, 2005; Page A1,
http://snipurl.com/steely0524
Once
With Doobie Brothers, Now in Counterterrorism, He Has Ear of Pentagon
The
guitarist-turned-defense-consultant does regular work for the Department
of Defense and the nation's intelligence community, chairs a
congressional advisory board on missile defense, and has lucrative
consulting contracts with companies like Science Applications
International Corp., Northrop Grumman Corp. and General Atomics
Aeronautical Systems Inc. He says he is in increasing demand for his
unconventional views of counterterrorism.
"We thought turntables were for
playing records until rappers began to use them as instruments, and we
thought airplanes were for carrying passengers until terrorists realized
they could be used as missiles," says Mr. Baxter, who sports a ponytail
and handlebar mustache. "My big thing is to look at existing
technologies and try to see other ways they can be used, which happens
in music all the time and happens to be what terrorists are incredibly
good at."
One of Mr. Baxter's clients --
General Atomics' vice president Mike Campbell -- likens him to a
"gluon," a term drawn from quantum physics that refers to the particles
binding together the basic building blocks of all matter. Contractors
and policymakers say Mr. Baxter can see past bureaucratic boundaries and
integrate information drawn from a variety of sources, though some who
have worked with him say he can also be a self-promoter.
Mr. Baxter can speak the
acronym-heavy vernacular of the professional defense consultant, but he
would never be mistaken for one of the hardened ex-military men who fill
the ranks of the industry. He rarely wears ties, is fond of
self-deprecating jokes, makes frequent popular-culture references, and
peppers his speech with casual profanity. He also often appears on VH1
music retrospectives.
Still, he's careful not to
discuss current or past projects that might be classified and keeps to a
punishing schedule. One morning recently, a black government-issued
sport-utility vehicle picked him up outside a Washington café as soon as
he had finished breakfast and whisked him to a Pentagon agency for
nearly 12 hours of meetings. That evening, he traveled to Ohio's
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base for several days of briefings and
meetings. He flew 230,000 miles last year, and makes a point of
dissolving brightly colored packets of vitamin supplements into his
drinks to stave off illness.
Mr. Baxter, who joined his first
band when he was 11, began studying journalism at Boston University, but
dropped out after a year in 1969 to begin working with Ultimate Spinach,
a short-lived Boston psychedelic rock band. He moved to California a
short time later and became one of the six original members of the
avant-garde rock group Steely Dan. He quit the band in 1974 and joined
the Doobie Brothers, helping to remake its sound into a commercially
appealing mix of funk and jazzy pop. Mr. Baxter left the group in 1979
after a long tour in support of its most popular album, "Minute by
Minute."
His defense work began in the
1980s, when it occurred to him that much of the hardware and software
being developed for military use, like data-compression algorithms and
large-capacity storage devices, could also be used for recording music.
Mr. Baxter's next-door neighbor, a retired engineer who worked on the
Pentagon's Sidewinder missile program, bought him a subscription to an
aviation magazine, and he was soon reading a range of military-related
publications.
Mr. Baxter began wondering
whether existing military systems could be adapted to meet future
threats they weren't designed to address, a heretical concept for most
defense thinkers. In his spare time, he wrote a five-page paper on a
primitive Tandy computer that proposed converting the military's Aegis
program, a ship-based antiplane system, into a rudimentary
missile-defense system.
On a whim, he gave the paper to a
friend from California, Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher. To Mr.
Baxter's surprise, the congressman took it seriously, and the idea
proved to be prescient: Aegis missile-defense systems have done well in
tests, and the Navy says it will equip at least one ship with the
antimissile system by the end of the year.
"Skunk really blew my mind with
that report," Mr. Rohrabacher says. "He was talking over my head half
the time, and the fact that he was a rock star who had basically learned
it all on his own was mind-boggling."
Mr. Rohrabacher passed the report
to another influential Republican lawmaker, Rep. Curt Weldon of
Pennsylvania. Mr. Weldon says he immediately realized that Mr. Baxter
could be a useful public advocate for missile defense because his
rock-star pedigree would attract attention to the issue.
"Most of Hollywood is from the
liberal, 'let's hug the tree and be warm and fuzzy and sing Kumbaya,'
bent," Mr. Weldon says. "You put Jeff Baxter up against them, and he
cleans their clocks because he actually knows the facts and details." He
has appeared in public debates and given numerous press and TV
interviews on CNN and Fox News advocating missile defense. He also
served as a national spokesman for Americans for Missile Defense, a
coalition of conservative organizations devoted to the issue.
Mr. Baxter, backed by several
lawmakers, got a series of classified security clearances. During one
background interview, Mr. Baxter says, he was asked whether he could be
bribed with money or drugs. He recalls telling the investigators not to
worry because he had already "been there, done that, and given away the
T-shirt" during his rock career.
His old friend Mr. Weldon chaired
the House Military Research and Development Subcommittee, and in 1995
nominated Mr. Baxter to chair the Civilian Advisory Board for Ballistic
Missile Defense, a congressional panel.
The missile-defense post led to
consulting contracts with the Pentagon's Missile Defense Agency and
National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. The Pentagon also began
regularly asking Mr. Baxter to lead enemy forces in war games, where he
quickly earned a reputation for using creative, terrorist-style tactics.
"I'm told I make a very good bad guy," he says.
Pentagon officials say they
appreciate Mr. Baxter's creativity. "He's imparted some new ways of
thinking about the ballistic-missile threat and the technology that
might be necessary to defeat it," says MDA spokesman Rick Lehner. "It's
been a good interchange of information."
In the late 1990s, Mr. Baxter led
a fictional future alliance of Iran and Iraq that was trying to drive
the U.S. Navy from the key oil-shipping routes through the Persian Gulf.
Facing a massive military imbalance, Mr. Baxter had covert operatives
introduce oil-eating bacteria into the Saudi Arabian oil supply that
rendered its petroleum shipments worthless. The Navy was forced to pull
out after oil-dependent American allies threatened to pull their
financial assets out of the U.S.
These days, Mr. Baxter finds
himself with a growing pile of job offers from Pentagon officials and
defense contractors hoping he can help them anticipate terrorist tactics
and strategies.
Mr. Baxter is working on a solo
album and continues to do lucrative studio work, most recently on
tribute albums to Pink Floyd and Aerosmith, but he spends more and more
time doing defense work. He says he earns a "good, comfortable,
six-figure income," and in 2004 made more money from defense consulting
than from music.
Mr. Baxter's friends in Congress
and the Pentagon say they take him seriously as a defense thinker but
concede that his celebrity past carries its own advantages. During a
trip to Manila with Mr. Baxter in 1998, Mr. Rohrabacher was having a
hard time winning permission to fly over a number of contested islands
until he brought Mr. Baxter to a meeting with the then-Philippine
president, Joseph Estrada. Mr. Estrada immediately put one of his
government's few C-130 transport planes at the two men's disposal. "He's
apparently just a huge Doobie Brothers fan," Mr. Rohrabacher says.
Jeff
Baxter played psychedelic music with Ultimate Spinach, jazz-rock with
Steely Dan and funky pop with the Doobie Brothers. But in the last few
years he has made an even bigger transition: Mr. Baxter, who goes by the
nickname "Skunk," has become one of the national-security world's
well-known counterterrorism experts.
A wiry man who wears a beret to
many of his meetings, Mr. Baxter, who is now 56 years old, has gone from
a rock career that brought him eight platinum records to a spot in the
small constellation of consultants paid to help both policy makers and
defense contractors better understand the way terrorists think and plan
attacks.
Continued in article
Japanese Banks Rebound From
Crisis
"Japanese
Banks Rebound From Crisis," by
Martin Fackler, The Wall Street Journal,
May 24, 2005; Page A6,
http://snipurl.com/bank0524
TOKYO --
Most of Japan's big banks are expected to show rebounding profits and
steep drops in bad loans when they announce annual earnings this week --
the most convincing evidence yet that the financial crisis that hobbled
the world's second-largest economy for more than a decade may finally be
over.
In a sign of brightening
prospects for the industry, Mizuho Financial Group Inc., said yesterday
that net profit for the fiscal year ended March 31 jumped 54% to 627.38
billion yen ($5.8 billion) from 406.98 billion yen a year earlier.
Mizuho Financial said bad loans fell to 2.12% of all lending by the
bank, less than half the level of a year earlier. Some of the bad loans
date back to the banking crisis's origins in the early 1990s, when
real-estate and stock-price bubbles collapsed.
Mizuho was the first large
Japanese lender to announce earnings, and analysts expect most of
Japan's six other big banking groups to show similar declines in bad
loans and gains in profit. All big banks are expected to meet a
government-imposed target of cutting nonperforming loans in half from
levels of two years ago.
Japanese banks, the analysts say,
now must turn attention to a new challenge: finding more-profitable
sources of revenue than their traditional low-margin corporate lending.
Banks are already making the first small steps in this direction,
offering consumer loans that carry high interest rates and selling
mutual funds and insurance products to their depositors, which generates
fat fees.
The results now being reported
mark "the end of the financial crisis," says Brett Hemsley, a
Tokyo-based banking analyst for credit-rating service Fitch Ratings.
"Banks have to turn the next page and look at how to grow."
That is a big turnaround for an
industry that just a few years ago appeared on the brink of collapse as
banks took huge losses to write off tens of billions of dollars in
soured loans. The banking system's near paralysis choked the flow of
funds to businesses, helping keep Japan's economy in a long, deep funk.
Japan's most convincing recovery
since its slump began in the early 1990s is helping banks back onto
their feet, analysts say. One new sign of recovery: The Japan Real
Estate Institute, an industry think tank, released a survey yesterday
showing average land prices in Tokyo rose 1.2% in the year ended March
31 -- the first gain in 14 years. This is good news for banks because
many loans had land as collateral, which no longer covered the value of
the original loan after land prices plunged.
Banks are also succeeding in
finally whittling bad debt down to manageable levels, which leads to
higher profits as banks spend less to write off failed loans. Some
analysts predict that when the seven big banks announce results, their
combined amount of soured debt will total about eight trillion yen, or
about $74 billion, one-third of what it was three years ago.
Mr. Hemsley at Fitch and other
analysts expect the combined annual net profit at the seven banks to
total about 500 billion yen. That would be the highest sum in five years
and would mark the first time combined results at big banks climbed into
the black since the year that ended in March 2001.
Only two large lenders, Sumitomo
Mitsui Financial Group Inc. and UFJ Holdings Inc., are expected to post
losses to write off failed debt. Both were seen as laggards in dealing
with bad loans, and have come under pressure from regulators to catch up
with the rest of the industry, analysts say.
The other big banks -- Resona
Holdings Inc., Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group Inc., Sumitomo Trust &
Banking Co. and Mitsui Trust Holdings Inc. -- are all expected to report
profits, the analysts say.
Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out, Start the Computer Revolution
ROGER LOWENSTEIN, "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out, Start the Computer
Revolution,"
The New York Times,
http://snipurl.com/tunein0524
LET'S get this straight: Jerry Garcia invented
the Internet while he was tripping on acid. No, actually, it was Ken
Kesey, who thought computers were the next thing after drugs -
which, according to John Markoff, they really were.
"What the Dormouse Said: How the 60's
Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry" (Viking, 287
pages) is Mr. Markoff's hymn to the 1960's, and to the social
idealists and, well, acid freaks who wanted to use computers to
promote an agenda of sharing, openness and personal growth.
His brief is that the longhairs liberated
computers from
I.B.M. and
the military industrial complex and profoundly shaped the technology
that is ubiquitous today. Formerly sequestered behind forbidding
glass walls, computers went on to become accessible, usable and
friendly. The industry had its consciousness raised - became a
vehicle of togetherness.
Grant, at least, that computers became
cool. During my adolescence, computers were evil. You remember HAL -
the electronic demon of "2001: A Space Odyssey." Computers made
people powerless. They represented war, capitalism and grownups.
Then (I think I was out for coffee) kids took over. So now computers
are about freedom. As I explained to my daughter the other night,
"Turn the darn thing off." Read a book, for Pete's sake.
According to Mr. Markoff, a senior writer
for The
New York Times
and the author of other books on computers, the counterculture made
it happen. He demonstrates that a good many of the electronics
freaks who were working on inventing the future in the 60's and
early 70's were, simultaneously, soaked in drugs, antiwar politics
and weird ideas.
At the heart of his story is Doug
Engelbart, a Navy veteran trained in radar during World War II who
became obsessed with the idea that computers could augment human
intelligence. Mr. Engelbart set up a research group at Stanford
that, despite its Pentagon funding, became an outpost for young,
creative and sometimes radicalized engineers.
In the 1960's, computers were machines for
math - for "computing." Mr. Engelbart saw much more. His team
invented or envisioned "every significant aspect of today's
computing world" - point-and-click screen control, text editing,
e-mail and networking. Mr. Kesey, the writer, was shown how Mr.
Engelbart's computers worked and declared them to be "the next thing
after acid." Even Mr. Engelbart, a white-shirted pied piper,
experimented with LSD, encounter groups, Chairman Mao and est. It's
a wonder he got anything done.
Actually, he didn't. In 1968, he
demonstrated computer interactivity at a conference that wowed
everyone and that the author, appropriately, dubs the "computing
world's Woodstock." And then - nothing. Too dreamy to part with his
technology until perfected, Mr. Engelbart never got around to
developing commercial applications. His staff gradually defected to
Xerox, which
was actually interested in selling products. Xerox ultimately blew
its commercial opportunity, but its technology would be widely
cloned.
Occasionally, the tale splinters like an
acid trip that goes on too long, with side trips and fervent
hyperboles that, in a strange way, do put one in mind of the 60's.
Engineers show up at Stanford, protest the war and drop out to join
communes. One of them will "alter the world's politics"- by which
Mr. Markoff means the engineering student staged a fast against the
R.O.T.C.
Stewart Brand, one of the most interesting
figures in the book, shepherds Mr. Kesey through an acid trip, an
event to which Mr. Kesey invited guitarist Jerry Garcia and his band
- giving rise to the Grateful Dead. Then, Mr. Brand turns up as the
cameraman at Mr. Engelbart's computing Woodstock.
This is the kind of
psychedelics-to-circuits connection that Mr. Markoff makes much of -
sometimes too much. Anyway, Mr. Brand went on to found the Whole
Earth Catalog, a very hip compendium of random information that was,
as I recall, perfectly useless. But Mr. Brand had a singular insight
with regard to information - "it wants to be free."
When Whole Earth got to be a drag, Mr.
Brand staged a demise party, at which he stunned guests by giving
away $20,000, his original investment. There was a debate over how
to spend it. Came the sage investment advice, "Give it back to the
Indians." It was decided that Fred Moore, an ardent pacifist of
anti-R.O.T.C. fame, would safeguard the funds, which meant putting
them in a tin can and burying them. Did this have anything to do
with computers? Actually, it did. Money made Mr. Moore unhappy.
Computers excited him, as did a sense of community. In 1975, he
founded an enthusiasts' society, the Homebrew Computer Club.
Hundreds of hobbyists came to the first meeting, including Stephen
Wozniak, who went on to co-found
Apple Computer.
The idea was that everyone would share information. Mr. Moore
believed that his club "should have nothing to do with making
money." But it did. Twenty-three entrepreneurial seedlings,
including Apple, would trace their roots to the club. Mr. Markoff
writes, "The deep irony is that Fred Moore lit the spark . . .
toward the creation of powerful information tools." This is
hyperbole. Lit a spark would be fair. The first commercial PC, the
Altair 8800,
had been developed - in New Mexico, 1,000 miles away - before
Homebrew ever assembled. But the attendants did, excitedly, pass
around a copy of software written for the Altair, which had been
developed by the infant Micro-Soft, as it was then known. Bill
Gates, its 20-year-old tycoon-to-be, sarcastically objected to the
pirating of his product. "Hardware must be paid for, but software is
something to share." Needless to say, Mr. Moore's view of sharing
was not endorsed by Mr. Gates. At this point, Marx and the history
of the software industry diverged.
In Mr. Markoff's view, the PC era, which
placed each user in charge of an isolated box, was a long detour
from the higher aim of information sharing conceived by Mr.
Engelbart. This purpose was vindicated by the Internet. The tension
still persists between profit-seeking publishers and, ahem,
idealists who would love to share what belongs to others - music
rights, for instance. According to the author, this is today "the
bitterest conflict facing the world's economy." Such overwrought
claims aside, at the core of "Dormouse" lies a valid and original
historical point. Computer technology did turn out to be creative,
spirited and even freeing. Most of this was a result of the fabulous
advances in the power of the microchip. But perhaps, also, in the
tactile clicking of the mouse, you can hear the faint strumming of a
guitar.
Continued in article
Restaurant with flushing success
(toilet-themed restaurant a big hit)
KAOHSIUNG - Displaying fancy toilet seats studded
with flowers and shells, colourful bathtubs, faucets, mirrors and shower
curtains, the well-lit window in this southern Taiwan city looks like a
showroom for a trendy bathroom brand. But this is a restaurant. It's unusual
theme is proving a draw for customers eager to eat food off plates and bowls
shaped like western loo seats as well as Japanese "squat toilets". Marton
Theme Restaurant, named after the Chinese word "Matong" for toilet, has
become a hit in Taiwan's second largest city since its opening in May 2004.
Though bathroom decor seems a bizarre way to whet the appetites of diners,
the idea has been so successful that owner, Eric Wang opened a second and
bigger branch just seven months later. "We not only sell food but also
laughter. The food is just as good as any restaurant but we offer additional
fun," says 26-year-old Wang, who gave up a career in banking to launch the
business. "Most customers think the more disgusting and exaggerated (the
restaurant is), the funnier the dining experience is," he says. The top
orders are curry hot pot; curry chicken rice and chocolate ice cream
because, well, "they look most like the real thing", Wang says. The price
ranges from 150 to 250 Taiwan dollars ($5 - 8 dollars) for a set menu, which
includes soup and ice cream. Customers, however, flock to Marton Restaurant
mainly for its quirky dining wares and interior decor. "This is such a funny
and strange restaurant," says patron Chen Bi-fang, while sitting atop a
colourful toilet seat — the standard chair at the restaurant. She sits by a
table converted from a bathtub with a glass cover while looking at a wall
decorated with neon-lit faucets and urinals turned into lamps. Chen first
came to the restaurant after seeing it featured on television and has
brought nine co-workers along for lunch on her second visit. "I think this
is the most special restaurant I've ever been to. The menu also looks good
and I'd like to try more next time," says newcomer Cheng Hung-chi, who found
out about the restaurant over the Internet and took her mother and brother
with her. They are exactly the kind of customers owner Wang are counting on
— drawn by novelty and who return with friends in a city crowded by a wide
variety of restaurants. "Our restaurant is the first and only of its kind in
Kaohsiung and that gives us an advantage in the saturated market here. Our
major challenge is to lure customers back after the initial fun," he says.
Other gimmicky restaurants in Taiwan using themes such as a prison, zombies
and even China's Mao Zedong achieved quick success but folded within a few
years after the novelty wore off. To make sure his investment wouldn't go
down the pan, Wang first tested the water for the toilet food gimmick by
peddling ice cream in toilet-shaped cones in street booths four months
before opening his restaurant. It was an instant hit as he sold up to 1,000
ice-cream cones daily for 30 dollars apiece, which is 5 to 10 dollars higher
than a regular one. His idea came from a popular Japanese comic featuring a
robot doll fond of eating excrement in ice cream cones. "The success with
'toilet ice cream' was a leap of faith for me to quit the stable but boring
banking job and start my business despite strong objections from my family,"
he says. The young entrepreneur is planning to expand his business to other
cities on the island though franchising after adding more items to the menu.
"After the curiosity fades, we have to
hold on to customers with upgraded food and services," Wang says.
"Restaurant
with flushing success (toilet-themed restaurant a big hit)," Free
Republic, Posted on 05/24/2005 7:41:04 AM ,
http://snipurl.com/toilet0524
UK allows extradition of 3 ex-bankers for
Enron
LONDON (Reuters) - The UK
is to allow the extradition of three former NatWest bankers to the United
States to face trial over fraud charges relating to U.S. energy company
Enron.The
three are "devastated but not surprised" and will appeal, said their
spokeswoman, Melanie Riley.Britain's Home Secretary Charles Clarke upheld a
ruling by a UK judge last October that the three could be extradited.The
bankers' case falls under UK legislation in force since January of last
year, which was originally designed to speed up the transfer of suspected
terrorists to the United States.This law has left the Home Secretary with
only limited powers to overrule court decisions on extradition.Former
bankers Gary Mulgrew, Giles Darby and David Bermingham -- who worked for
NatWest Bank, which is now part of Royal Bank of Scotland -- have been
fighting the extradition, which would require them to face trial in Houston,
Texas.The three, who deny the fraud allegations, have argued that they
should face trial in the UK.They are alleged to have conspired with Enron
executives, including former finance chief Andrew Fastow, over the sale of a
stake in an Enron entity in 2000.
Reuters,
"UK allows extradition of 3
ex-bankers for Enron," Wired News,
Tuesday, May 24, 2005 10:30 a.m. ET,
http://snipurl.com/enron0524
The Business of Life: E-Learning Threatens Publishers
There's been a change in Ellen Lichtenstein's
study patterns. For half her classes this past year, she no longer had to
visit a library to get the reading materials professors had placed on
reserve. Instead, she only needed Internet access and a password. "It's as
simple as logging into my e-mail account, clicking on a few links and
printing it," said Lichtenstein, 21, a New York University communications
senior from Birmingham, Ala. "There's no going to the library, waiting on
line, waiting to Xerox it, there's none of that." And publishing companies
are worried precisely because of that ease and convenience — it's another
way for publishers to lose sales. The Association of American Publishers
already has contacted one school, the University of California, San Diego,
claiming "blatantly infringing use is being made of numerous books, journals
and other copyrighted works." Allan Adler, the group's vice president for
legal and government affairs, said he was investigating other universities,
which he would not name. He suspected the practice might be widespread on
campuses nationwide, but said publishers could never know because such items
are generally on password-protected sites. U.S. copyright law offers greater
leeway for noncommercial uses like education, but such "fair use" exemptions
are not automatic. Rather, courts ultimately must apply a four-part test
that balances, among other things, the amount copied and its effect on
potential sales. A password can help but does not guarantee an exemption.
Libraries have largely been permitted to make a limited number of copies
available through reserve systems, in which students borrow a book or a
binder of photocopied articles for a few hours at a time. Students can make
copies for themselves under fair use. But when FedEx Kinko's Office and
Print Services tried to extend that premise and packaged collections of
articles, book chapters and other items as "course packs" in two New York
stores, publishers sued the FedEx Corp. unit and prevailed. Kinko's was told
to pay $2 million to eight publishers in that 1991 case. ... CONTINUED IN
ARTICLE...
ANICK JESDANUN, "The Business of Life: E-Learning Threatens Publishers,"
AP, ABC News Business, May 25, 2005, http://snipurl.com/publsh0524
Tidbits on May 27, 2005
Bob Jensen
at
Trinity
University
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Archives of Tidbits: Tidbits Directory ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/TidbitsDirectory.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have
key words to enter --- Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity
and other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Bob Jensen's home page
is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/
Security threats and hoaxes ---
http://www.trinity.edu/its/virus/
Music for the Quiet of Summer:
Ain't Misbehavin' ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/porch.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Update on my retirement
plans and mountain life in New Hampshire
Are you interested in becoming my replacement at Trinity University?
So far there’s not been much spring up here. It
has been the coldest month of May in years and has rained over half the
days in April and May. Everything is green, but the colored blooms like
lilacs are all delayed. Some of Erika’s potted plants that were set out
froze when the night temperatures dropped below 20 degrees.
The bears are getting a bit more aggressive.
Our good friends watched a bear come up to their deck and try to get
into the house in broad daylight. Their daughter had a bear open that
both opened a garage door and got into a car during the night. While she
was gardening, a neighbor watched a bear go into the garage and drag a
trash bag into the woods. Last year we saw a mother bear with four cubs.
It’s not common for a sow to have more than two cubs.
Fortunately, all our mountain bears are black
bears. Black bears are noted for their good dispositions. It is
extremely rare for them to hurt a person, and that usually only happens
if they are threatened or protecting cubs. The western brown bears, in
contrast, are sometimes mean and aggressive.
Our worry is hitting a moose on the road. Over
200 of these giants are hit per year in NH, and there’s not much give
when you hit a moose. Sometimes your car is all smashed in and the moose
walks back into the woods. When driving you also have to watch for the
many deer that might be on the road. The same good friends who had a
bear on their deck also totaled their Mercedes on a deer last fall.
Erika is healing and somewhat sad that I will
be gone for another two semesters. Since I love my job so much, however,
I am looking forward to my last year of teaching. She could come stay
with me in Texas, but she prefers her mountain cottage to apartment
living.
Trinity University has been good to me and I
wish them all the best in searching for my replacement. Any senior
accounting faculty interested in becoming the Jesse H. Jones Professor
at Trinity University should contact Dan Walz at
dwalz@trinity.edu
Bob Jensen ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm
Bravo Bangor
Tired and bleary-eyed, Marines of the 1st
Battalion, 7th Regiment, based at Twentynine Palms, Calif., were finally
back on U.S. soil after seven months on the front lines in Iraq. But they
were still many miles and hours from their families and the homecoming they
longed for. Their officers told them they would be on the ground for 60 to
90 minutes while their chartered plane was refueled. So they disembarked and
began walking through the airport terminal orridor to a small waiting room.
That's when they heard the applause. Lining the hall and clapping were
dozens of Bangor residents who have set a daunting task for themselves: They
want every Marine, soldier, sailor and airman returning through the tiny
international airport here to get a hero's welcome. Even if the planes
arrive in the middle of the night or a blizzard, they are there. Composed
mostly from the generation that served in World War II and Korea, they call
themselves the Maine Troop Greeters. They have met every flight bringing
troops home from Iraq for nearly two years b more than 1,000 flights and
nearly 200,000 troops. "Here they come. Everybody get ready," said Joyce
Goodwin, 71, her voice full of excitement, undiminished by the hundreds of
times she has shown up to embrace the returning troops.
Tony Perry Times Staff Writer April 20, 2005
Jensen Comment: The Bangor Airport is the former Dow SAC Base and is a
popular refueling site for international flights headed elsewhere.
A new government Website on Cybercrime ---
http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/cybercrime/
Bob Jensen's threads on computing and networking are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
Bob Jensen's threads on consumer frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm
CNN ran a scary special last night on ID
theft. It is by far the fastest growing crime in the U.S. with over
10,000,000 victims per year. Chances are increasing that you will
be hit and that there is little you can do to prevent it since we've
become so dependent upon credit cards and bank accounts. The sad
thing is that Congress shows little interest in really getting tough
in forcing companies to take more serious preventative measures. I
guess the banking lobbies are not working in our best interests
these days.
Bob Jensen's threads on identity theft
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft
Sustainable Table: Serving Up Healthy Food Choices ---
http://www.sustainabletable.org/home/
Aaron Konstam sent a link that provides more detail on how to
get personal information on people and how to remove your personal
information from the the Zabasearch database ---
http://www.snopes.com/computer/internet/zabasearch.asp
The Zabasearch site is at
http://www.zabasearch.com/
Bob Jensen's search helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Giving quizzes and exams via Blackboard and WebCT
Use Quizzes/Surveys to create and
administer quizzes and surveys. The Quiz and Survey tools can be
used for summative and formative evaluation.
WebCT@Queens --- ---
http://www.its.queensu.ca/webct/facultyguide/tools/quizzes.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
A sociologist describes religion as "a fundamental belief in
magic"
The essay, “Religion & Morality: A
Contradiction Explained,” critiqued the role of religion. “Modern
religion is a fundamental belief in magic,” he wrote. The essay also
argued that religion had numerous negative consequences. Of
religions, he wrote: “They persist today because they are so
effective at constructing group identities and at setting up
conflict between the in- and out-groups. For all religions, there is
an ‘us’ and a ‘them.’ All the ritual and the fellowship associated
with religious practice is just a means of continually emphasizing
group boundaries.”
Scott Jaschik, "Academic Freedom or Intolerance of Faith?" Inside
Higher Ed, May 26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/26/shortell
Economic Theory Question: Why are Catholics more likely to
gamble?
Who Gambles in the Stock
Market?
by Alok Kumar
Option theory meet portfolio selection. It fits
the theory perfectly, even though I am less sure
of some of the non economic aspects (for
instance, why would Catholics be more likely to
take chances), but it sure is an interesting
paper that does fit with theory.
Short version: the poor take bigger chances.
(gee, Option theory would predict that
perfectly!)
SSRN-Who Gambles in the
Stock Market? by Alok Kumar
If a desire to escape poverty induces
gambling, socio-economic factors which
promote lottery purchases are also likely to
induce investors to adopt sub-optimal stock
investment strategies. Specifically,
investors with a large differential between
their existing economic status and their
aspiration levels would tilt their
portfolios toward riskier lottery-type
stocks. However, these investors may hold
riskier stocks not necessarily because they
are risk-seeking but rather because they
want to have a positive probability, albeit
very small, of reaching their aspiration
levels."
A friend of mine calls lotteries taxes on the
stupid (overlooking the physic pleasure of
playing). Kumar addresses this point not by
using intelligence, but rather education:
"investor characteristics may influence
probability distortions, where relatively
sophisticated investors are less likely to
distort the small probabilities. For
instance, educated individuals are more
likely to understand the odds of winning
while relatively less educated individuals
may significantly distort the winning odds.
If education is correlated with income and
wealth, rich individuals are less likely to
participate in lotteries."
One final quote:
"I assume that investors are more likely to
perceive lower-priced stocks with very small
but positive potential for high returns as
lotteries. I further assume that stocks with
higher variance (or higher idiosyncratic
volatility or extreme returns) and
positively skewed returns are likely to be
perceived as high payoff potential stocks."
Interesting!
Cite:
Kumar, Alok, "Who Gambles in the Stock Market?"
(May 2005).
http://ssrn.com/abstract=686022
From Jim Mahar's blog on May 20, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Predictions by Bill Gates: Further Down the Road
When Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates released
his first book, The Road Ahead, in 1996, he predicted technical
wonders we take for granted now. He saw that, in the future, music
would be kept as digital bits of information, rather than on CDs and
cassettes. He foresaw the workforce displacement that the Web
enables. And he predicted a dramatic rise in shopping on the Net,
changing consumer habits forever. Now Gates is ready to look into
his crystal ball again. BusinessWeek Online has learned that the
Microsoft (MSFT ) founder is in the preliminary stages of writing a
new book, looking once again at the future of technology. ANOTHER
BEST SELLER? Microsoft is in the final stages of closing a deal with
a co-author, whom the company declined to name. And Gates's
representatives have begun meeting with book industry execs to gauge
their interest. The software giant won't say yet when it hopes to
see a book in print: "Further Down Bill Gates's Road Microsoft's
founder is authoring another volume of predictions about
technology's future, including IT's impact on world health and
education,"
Jay Greene, Business Week, May 18, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/gates2
The game of chess matches a human expert against 64
computers: The man's chances are slim at best
Developed by the Abu Dhabi-based PAL
Group, Hydra uses 64 computers that operate as a single machine. It
can analyse 200m chess moves in a second and think up to 40 moves
ahead. Its technology can also be applied to supercomputer tasks
such as DNA and fingerprint matching, code-breaking and space travel
calculations. Adams, who became a grandmaster at 17 and has played
almost 2,000 games in international tournaments, is understandably
cautious about his chances. "I know it will be a very tough match,
but I will do my best," he said at the announcement of the contest
at a London hotel yesterday. "You have to adopt a slightly different
strategy against a computer because there is no way you can compete
against that massive processing power. I will be using intuition and
experience to take the computer into positions it is uncomfortable
with."
Richard Jinman, "Man v machine in chess showdown," The Guardian,
May 25, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/news/0,12597,1491666,00.html
Time Magazine readers pick all-time movie favorites
"All-Time 100 Top Movies," Time Magazine, May 25, 2005 ---
http://www.time.com/time/2005/100movies/index.html
The complete listing is at
http://www.time.com/time/2005/100movies/the_complete_list.html
German spam is raining down on Bob Jensen
Almost a year after they first
appeared, hundreds of German-language junk e-mails are once more
sprouting up in many people's inboxes.
Robert MacMillan. "Gotterspammerung," The Washington Post,
May 16, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/16/AR2005051600490.html?referrer=email
Belgian Experiment: Make Prostitution Legal to Fight Its Ills
Germany, the
Netherlands
and Greece
have legalized or expanded regulation of prostitution in the past
six years, and others are considering similar moves. By forcing the
business out into the open, the governments hope to make it harder
for human traffickers to thrive. Nearly 800,000 people are
trafficked across borders world-wide each year, according to the
U.S. State Department. The victims, promised passage to and work in
the West, are typically forced, defrauded or coerced into sexual
exploitation, in a modern-day form of slavery. Some Eastern European
countries that joined the European Union last year have become major
transit points for trafficked women. Antwerp, a port city of
500,000, offers a case study in the benefits -- and limits -- of
legalization. Local police say the tight controls in the tolerance
zone have helped reduce prostitution-related crime -- including drug
trafficking, assault, rape, murder and vandalism -- by 44% overall
since 2001. Legalization also has brought in nearly $800,000 in tax
revenue to the city.
Dan Bilefsky, "Belgian Experiment: Make Prostitution Legal to Fight
Its Ills: In Antwerp Area, Police Battle Crime, Human Trafficking;
Outside, It Still Goes On," The Wall Street Journal, May 26,
2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111706273289743489,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Academic research that must be kept secret
Half of all American medical schools would
let companies that sponsor clinical drug trials draft journal
articles based on the studies and two in five would allow sponsors
to prohibit researchers from sharing data with third parties after
the studies are completed, according to a survey by researchers at
Harvard University’s School of Public Health. The study, which was
published in The New England Journal of Medicine, examined the
agreements between medical schools and the pharmaceutical companies
that sponsor about 70 percent of the clinical drug trials in the
United States.
Scott Jaschik, "Quick Takes: Drug Companies’ Influence," Inside
Higher Ed, May 26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/26/qt
Extension 720 offers discerning and insightful commentary on a
very wide range of issues
In a day and age where many radio programs
rely on the powers of mere shock value, Extension 720 offers
discerning and insightful commentary on a very wide range of issues.
Based out of Chicago, the program is hosted by Milt Rosenberg, who
is a professor emeritus at the University of Chicago. Since 1973,
the program has featured the likes of Margaret Thatcher, Jimmy
Carter, Charlton Heston, William Safire, and Calvin Trillin, among
others. On the site, visitors can listen to the current program, or
browse through the extensive archives, which date back to 2003.
Additionally, visitors can also view highlights of interviews from
the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Some of the more recent programs have
focused their attention on the world of stand-up comedy, organized
crime in Chicago, and the current state of various Great Books
curricula in American high schools and colleges.
Scout Report, May 27, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ScoutMay27
Extension 720 ---
http://wgnradio.com/shows/ex720/index.html
New Constitution Day (September 17) requirement for most
colleges and universities
The U.S. Constitution was signed on
September 17, 1787. Sen. Robert Byrd takes the Constitution very
seriously and worries that not enough Americans share his passion or
know much about the Constitution. So the powerful West Virginia
senator inserted into an appropriations bill last year a requirement
that all educational institutions receiving federal funds offer an
instructional program every Constitution Day, September 17. Colleges
are covered by the provision and the Education Department released
rules Tuesday to carry out the law. The rules aren’t really rules at
all. They just restate the requirement of the law, note that
Constitution Day programs can be held the week prior or after
September 17 if that day falls on a weekend or holiday (this year it
is a Saturday), and offer some Web sites with information about the
Constitution. So while colleges have to do something on Constitution
Day, they can decide on just about any approach.
Scott Jaschik, "Few Rules for New Constitution Day Requirement,"
Inside Higher Ed, May 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/25/constitution
Remembering Ricoeur
Paul Ricoeur — the philosopher whose writings on hermeneutics were
the cornerstone of an ambitious rethinking of the relationship
between the humanities and the social sciences — died on Friday at
the age of 92. By the late 1960s, American academic presses had made
him one of the first French thinkers of his generation with a
substantial body of work available in English. Even as an
octogenarian, he was more productive than many scholars half his
age. Late last year, the University of Chicago Press published
Memory, History, Forgetting — an enormous study of the conditions of
possibility for both historical writing and moral forgiveness. His
book The Course of Recognition is due from Harvard University Press
this fall. And Ricoeur himself provided the ideal survey of his life
and philosophical development in Critique and Commitment, a lively
set of interviews that Columbia University Press issued in 1998. At
the time of his death, he was professor emeritus at both the
University of Paris and the University of Chicago. “The entire
European humanist tradition is mourning one of its most talented
spokesmen,” said a statement from the office of Jean-Pierre Raffarin,
the prime minister of France, released over the weekend. And that
leads to a conundrum. It is Tuesday already, and nobody in the
American media has insulted Ricoeur yet. What’s going on? Have our
pundits lost their commitment to mocking European intellectuals and
the pointy-headed professors who read them? At first I thought it
might be that people were still tired from abusing Derrida following
his death last fall. But clearly that’s not it.
Scott McLemee, "Remembering Ricoeur," Inside Higher Ed, May
24, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/24/mclemee
MLA Opposes Boycott
The Executive Council of the Modern
Language Association on Wednesday sent a letter to the Association
of University Teachers, Britain’s primary faculty union, calling on
it to end its boycott of two Israeli universities. The MLA letter
said that the boycott “is damaging to the vital free exchange of
ideas,” and that the boycott ran counter to the MLA’s belief that
scholars should be judged not on the basis of their nationality, but
on “the character and quality of their work.”
Scott Jaschik, "MLA Opposes Boycott," Inside Higher Ed, May
26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/26/qt
Two wrongs don't make a right, but they
make a good excuse.
Thomas Szasz. as quoted by Mark Shapiro at
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-05-25-05.htm
The very spring and root of honesty and
virtue lie in good education.
Plutarch.as quoted by Mark Shapiro at
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-05-17-05.htm
With the growing maturity of linear and reductionist paradigms,
the new frontier for problem-solving tools will be new mathematics
and algorithms. It is clear that new tools are needed for solving
more difficult social and biological problems. This type of
mathematics will be capable of handling uncertainties, making
decisions and modeling very large systems and networks which are
complex, nonlinear and distributive.
New Mathematics and Natural Computation, a new journal from
World Scientific ---
http://www.worldscinet.com/nmnc/01/0101/S17930057050101.html
Statistical Abstract of the United States 2004-2005 edition
available now! ---
http://www.census.gov/statab/www/
Income and tax statistics from the IRS ---
http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/article/0,,id=130546,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on economic statistics are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#EconStatistics
Bob Jensen's threads on encyclopedias are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Dictionaries
Faculty sanction issues and related cases
(Persons) interested in this thread may
also be interested in a recent summary on faculty sanction issues
and related cases from the National Conference on Law in Higher
Education (annually at Stetson U. Law School) online at
http://www.aaup.org/Legal/info
outlines/05legmiscon.htm
(it also links to some sample campus
policies).
May 17, 2005 email message from Tracy Sutherland
Deals from Hell: A new book by Robert Bruner
It is, of course, the losers that
create the most interest. The flash of a big deal is like watching a
Ferrari dart down the highway. Immense sums are at stake, as well as
the reputations of highflying chief executives, and there is always
the chance of a smash-up around the bend. Mr. Bruner fixes on 10
notorious smash-ups, such as the AOL-Time Warner combination of
2000, AT&T's bungled purchase of NCR Corp. in 1991 and the failed
leveraged buyout of Revco Drug Stores in 1986. He then helps us to
understand such debacles by examining the causes of failure in the
nonfinancial world, noting that "at the heart of most disasters is
an element of human choice or action that might have averted the
outcome."
Dennis Berman, "If Only They Had Never Met," The Wall
Street Journal, May 26, 2005; Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111705847256743404,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Demand for Certified Bookkeepers Outpacing Supply
In the seven years since bookkeeper
certification was introduced, 10,000 bookkeepers have registered for
certification. Another 15,000 have requested information on the
certification process. Yet the question remains: can employers find
enough certified bookkeepers (CB) to meet their needs? “The good
news for employers,” says Steve Sahlein, Co-President of the
American Institute of Professional Bookkeepers (AIPB), “is that
between the increased demand for Certified Bookkeepers and the
Department of Labor’s Occupational Outlook Handbook predicting that
the best jobs will go to Certified Bookkeepers, we expect to see a
lot more CBs in the near future.” Chris Brademas, Human Resources
Director at Beach, Fleischman & Co. P.C., southern Arizona’s largest
CPA firm, has felt the pinch. “I knew that a CB would fit in with
our firm’s emphasis on highly trained professionals,” she says.
Unfortunately, a “Certified Bookkeeper highly preferred” job
posting, returned no CB applicants. So she turned to nearby Pima
County Community College, one of more than 100 colleges and
universities nationwide certification preparatory courses, and hired
a student on the certification track. Across the country, in
Nashville, Tennessee, Certified Bookkeeper Kelly Ritts, sent out six
resumes, interviewed with five companies and received three job
offers. Certification may even mean more to employers than an
Associate Degree in accounting, as Brenda Lee Shelt of Kalispell,
Montana found out. Without certification, the CPA firm she wanted to
work at wouldn’t even interview her. As soon as she became a
certified bookkeeper, the same firm not only hired her, they’re
paying her 50 percent more than they pay individuals with
Associate’s Degrees and have promised to review her performance and
contract after three months. This is not news to employment agencies
who have long found Certified Bookkeepers have a tremendous
advantage when it comes to competing for jobs. “Employers will pay
more for bookkeepers who have proven their technical knowledge in a
national exam,” says Stan Hartman who manages the AIPB’s job
placement Web site. “Many bookkeepers may have only on-the-job
training.”
"Demand For Certified Bookkeepers Outpacing Supply,"
AccountingWeb, May 18, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100916
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
University of Minnesota's Insect Collection ---
http://www.entomology.umn.edu/museum/index.html
New Type of Rewards Card for Fliers
In a move that will likely reassure
travel-rewards seekers who are worried about the availability of
frequent-flier seats, American Express Co. launched a new card
yesterday that earns customers points redeemable for cash discounts
of as much as 75% on Delta Air Lines flights. People using the card,
called the SkyPoints Credit Card, earn a new frequent-flier currency
called SkyPoints, which they can trade in for the airline discounts.
For instance, a customer could trade 15,000 SkyPoints for a 50%
discount off a $400 cross-country Delta flight.
Ron Lieber, "New Type of Rewards Card for Fliers: AmEx Gives
Customers Choice of Earning Discounts Or Miles for Delta Flights,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 26, 2005; Page D2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111706978914843704,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Minorities forced to compete for doctoral fellowships
According to the report, from the Woodrow
Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, many of the groups that
support minority Ph.D. students have broadened their programs to
include other students as well. As a result, the report warns that
the cohort of new Ph.D.’s — and in turn the cohort of new professors
in the years to come — may lack the racial and ethnic diversity many
colleges want for their faculties. The foundation’s report has two
main parts. One part summarizes data showing how few Ph.D.’s are
awarded to black and Hispanic students. In 2003, the report notes,
one in three Americans was black or Hispanic, but only one in nine
American citizens who received Ph.D.’s that year were black or
Hispanic. The data in the report largely come from the studies
conducted by the National Opinion Research Center at the University
of Chicago and released in December.
Scott Jaschik, "Dwindling Support," Inside Higher Ed, May 26,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/26/minority
"Rise of the Plagiosphere," by Ed Tenner, MIT's Technology
Review, June 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/issue/megascope.asp?trk=nl
Enter text-comparison software. A small
handful of entrepreneurs have developed programs that search the
open Web and proprietary databases, as well as e-books, for
suspicious matches. One of the most popular of these is Turnitin;
inspired by journalism scandals such as the New York Times'
Jayson Blair case, its creators offer a version aimed at
newspaper editors. Teachers can submit student papers
electronically for comparison with these databases, including
the retained texts of previously submitted papers. Those
passages that bear resemblance to each other are noted with
color highlighting in a double-pane view.
Two years ago I heard a speech by a New
Jersey electronic librarian who had become an antiplagiarism
specialist and consultant. He observed that comparison programs
were so thorough that they often flagged chance similarities
between student papers and other documents. Consider, then, that
Turnitin's spiders are adding 40 million pages from the public
Web, plus 40,000 student papers, each day. Meanwhile Google
plans to scan millions of library books--including many still
under copyright--for its Print database. The number of
coincidental parallelisms between the various things that people
write is bound to rise steadily.
A third technology will add yet more
capacity to find similarities in writing.
Artificial-intelligence researchers at MIT and other
universities are developing techniques for identifying
nonverbatim similarity between documents to make possible the
detection of nonverbatim plagiarism. While the investigators may
have in mind only cases of brazen paraphrase, a program of this
kind can multiply the number of parallel passages severalfold.
Some universities are encouraging
students to precheck their papers and drafts against the
emerging plagiosphere. Perhaps publications will soon routinely
screen submissions. The problem here is that while such rigorous
and robust policing will no doubt reduce cheating, it may also
give writers a sense of futility. The concept of the biosphere
exposed our environmental fragility; the emergence of the
plagiosphere perhaps represents our textual impasse. Copernicus
may have deprived us of our centrality in the cosmos, and Darwin
of our uniqueness in the biosphere, but at least they left us
the illusion of the originality of our words. Soon that, too,
will be gone.
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Paul Pacter has been working hard to both maintain his
international accounting site and to produce a comparison guide
between international and Chinese GAAP. He states the following on
May 26, 2005 at
http://www.iasplus.com/index.htm
May 26, 2005:
Deloitte (China) has published a comparison of accounting
standards in the People's Republic of China and International
Financial Reporting Standards as of March 2005. The comparison
is available in both English and Chinese. China has different
levels of accounting standards that apply to different classes
of entities. The comparison relates to the standards applicable
to the largest companies (including all non-financial listed and
foreign-invested enterprises) and identifies major accounting
recognition and measurement differences. Click to download:
The chronology of events leading up to European adoption if
common international accounting standards ---
http://www.iasplus.com/restruct/resteuro.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting theory are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory.htm
How to use
VAR, ETL in Excel
Estimating Risk Measures
I wish I could
retroactively require an article to be read! If
I could, this would be it for my Portfolio class
(Fin422).
Writing in
Financial Engineering News,
Kevin Dowd explains how to
use Excel to calculate VAR and other risk
measures. This will be VERY HELPFUL in class!!!
For instance: "To estimate the daily VaR at,
say, the 99 percent confidence level, we can use
Excel’s Large command, which gives the kth
largest value in an array. Thus, if our data are
an array called “losses,” we can take the VaR to
be the eleventh largest loss out of 1,000. (We
choose the eleventh largest loss as our VaR
because the confidence level implies that one
percent of losses – 10 losses – should exceed
the VaR.) The estimated VaR is given by the
Excel command “=Large(losses,11)”."
good stuff! Read it!!!
From Jim Mahar's blog on May 23, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on VAR are under the V-terms at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#V-Terms
VAR
disclosures are one of the alternatives allows under SEC Rule 4-08
Here is a Good Summary of Various Forms of
Business Risk ---
http://www.erisk.com/portal/Resources/resources_archive.asp
A U.S. school hasn't won the world computer programming
championship since 1997
On April 7, CNET News.com reported the
following: "The University of Illinois tied for 17th place in the
world finals of the Association for Computing Machinery
International Collegiate Programming Contest. ... "That's the lowest
ranking for the top-performing U.S. school in the 29-year history of
the competition. Shanghai Jiao Tong University of China took top
honors this year, followed by Moscow State University and the St.
Petersburg Institute of Fine Mechanics and Optics. Those results
continued a gradual ascendance of Asian and East European schools
during the past decade or so. A U.S. school hasn't won the world
championship since 1997, when students at Harvey Mudd College
achieved the honor. 'The U.S. used to dominate these kinds of
programming Olympics,' said David Patterson, president of the
Association for Computing Machinery and a computer science professor
at the University of California at Berkeley. 'Now we're sort of
falling behind.' "
Thomas Friedman, "Where Have You Gone, Joe DiMaggio?," The New
York Times, May 18, 2005
The New AP
The College Board will soon begin research
in an effort to make Advanced Placement courses and exams more
closely resemble the best first-year college courses. Traditionally,
the College Board surveyed colleges across the country and used
responses to generate its curriculum. “For Advanced Placement U.S.
History, we asked things like: ‘How much time do you spend on the
Civil War? Or the Industrial Revolution?’” said Trevor Packer, the
AP executive director. “Then we structured courses and exams
accordingly.” In its new approach, the College Board will consult
experts, both inside and outside colleges, to determine which
first-year college courses across the nation are held in highest
regard, and then model AP courses and exams after them.
David Epstein, "The New AP," Inside Higher Ed, May 26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/26/ap
Music for Memorial Day: God
Bless America ---
http://www.dayspring.com/movies/view.asp?moviename=GBA2movie.swf
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Memorial Day History ---
http://www.usmemorialday.org/backgrnd.html
A moving tribute to Memorial
Day and the American veteran from the American Revolution to modern times
---
http://home.ptd.net/~nikki/memorial.htm
Soldier, rest!
Thy warfare o'er,
Sleep the sleep that knows not breaking,
Dream of battled fields no more.
Days of danger, nights of waking.
~Sir Walter Scott
Sweet smell of $10.6 million
"A former top-ranked radio host, who claims she was sickened by a
colleague's use of a perfume described as 'romantic, sensual, emotional,'
won $10.6 million in a federal court lawsuit Monday," the Detroit News
reported on May 24, 2005 ---
http://www.detnews.com/2005/business/0505/24/A01-191461.htm
.
"Reforming Journalism Education," by
David Epstein, Inside Higher Ed, May 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/27/carnegie
Five universities and
two foundations on Thursday announced a collaborative plan to bolster
journalism education. Some leading journalism educators who are not
involved in the effort, however, question whether it is pushing in the
right direction.
Normally competitors,
the institutions using $4.1 million from the Carnegie Corporation and
the Knight Foundation over the next two years to join forces will be the
journalism schools of Columbia University, Northwestern University, the
University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Southern
California and Harvard University’s Joan Shorenstein Center for Press,
Politics and Public Policy. The universities have already pledged
another $2 million in the third year to continue the collaboration.
Vartan Gregorian,
president of the Carnegie Corporation and former Brown University
president, brought representatives from the universities together
beginning in 2002 to discuss the crises facing journalism, including
surveys that show declining public trust, and apathy from the young
audience. “School teachers and journalists are the most important
professions to make democracy safe,” Gregorian said. “And yet journalism
schools do not have the respect or standing they need within the
university.” He added that of 400 journalism programs in the country,
only 100 are accredited.
Continued in article
A Day at the Brain Spa Coming soon to a
mall near you
At a
Dana Foundation
conference on
neuroethics last
week at the Library of Congress, University of Pennsylvania neurologist
Anjan Chatterjee
declared that we are already well advanced in the enhancement era of
neuropharmacology. As evidence, Chatterjee offered a scenario in which a
high level executive who works 80 to 100 hours a week comes to clinical
neurologist for help. His wife has just divorced him because he was never
home, and he's feeling down, which is affecting his work. The executive asks
for something to brighten his mood so he can function effectively at work
once again. The neurologist prescribes one of the anti-depressant
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
like Prozac or Paxil. A few weeks later, his
colleagues find him more pleasant and cooperative than he's ever been and he
soon gets another promotion.
Ronald Bailey, "A Day at the Brain Spa Coming soon to a mall near you,"
Reason Magazine, May 18, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/rb/rb051805.shtml
Personal Investing Advice
From Jim Mahar's blog on May 27, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Great advice from Free
Money Finance I am excited about this-- A new finance web site by a
football fan and a serious cyclist. It is a total given that I am going
to link to it and mention it. What makes this even better is that the
site is really good!
It is Free
Money Finance. Free Money Finance ---
http://www.freemoneyfinance.com/
It is not an academic
finance site, but it is excellent for those of you looking for solid
information about your personal finances.
The advice is dead-on! I
especially suggest you all read the Best Financial Advice series.
A quick taste:
From Lesson 2: "Spend
less than you earn. Successful financial planning really stems from that
simple statement. If you retain a portion of your current income,
youÂ'll soon ask yourself a question: what should you do with that
money? And that question is the beginning of wealth creation."
Great stuff!!! In fact I
am going to cross post this on the FinanceClass blog as well.
Bob Jensen's investment bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#Finance
Accentuate the Obvious
Not every scientist can discover the double helix,
or the cellular basis of memory, or the fundamental building blocks of
matter. But fear not. For those who fall short of these lofty goals, another
entry in the "publications" section of the ol' c.v. is within your reach.
The proliferation of scientific journals and meetings makes it possible to
publish or present papers whose conclusion inspires less "Wow! Who would
have guessed?" and more "For this you got a Ph.D.?" In what follows (with
thanks to colleagues who passed along their favorites), names have been
withheld to protect the silly.
Sharon Begley, "Scientists Research Questions Few Others Would Bother to
Ask," The Wall Street Journal, May 27, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article_print/0,,SB111715390781744684,00.html
Jensen Comment: Although some of the studies Begley cites are
well-intended, her article does remind me of some of the more extreme
studies that won Senator Proxmire's Golden Fleece Awards ---
http://www.taxpayer.net/awards/goldenfleece/about.htm
Also seeh
ttp://www.encyclopedia.com/html/G/GoldenF1l.asp
Accounting research in top accounting journals seldom is not so much a
fleecing as it is a disappointment in drawing "obvious" conclusions that
practicing accountants "would not bother to ask." Behavioral studies focus
on what can be studied rather than what is interesting to study. Studies
based on analytical mathematics often start with assumptions that guarantee
the outcomes. And capital markets event studies either "discover" the
obvious or are inconclusive.
Bob Jensen's threads on academic research
versus the practice of accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
Evidence that psychopaths are born, not
made
Researchers at the Institute of Psychiatry, in
London, are not shy about tackling controversial topics. One of them, Terrie
Moffitt, was responsible for studies that showed how different versions of
the gene for one of the brain's enzymes resulted in different
predispositions to criminal activity. Another, Robert Plomin, found the
first plausible candidate for a gene that boosts intelligence. Now, Dr
Moffitt and Dr Plomin have been helping two other researchers, Essi Viding
and James Blair, with an equally high-profile study—one which asks whether
psychopaths are born that way, or are made so by their upbringings. That, of
course, is rather a crude way of putting it. After decades of debate,
biologists have come to understand what was blindingly obvious to most
laymen—which is that rather than being shaped by nature or nurture, most
behavioural traits are the result of an interaction between the two.
Nevertheless, one or the other can still be the dominant factor. And the
study in question, to be published in June's edition of the Journal of Child
Psychology and Psychiatry, suggests that in the case of psychopathy, the
genetic side is very important indeed.
"Original Sinners?" The Economist, May 26, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=4008792
Social Security's Sham Guarantee: They
are not guaranteed legally because workers have no contractual or property
rights to any benefits whatsoever
How many times during the recent debate over Social
Security reform have you heard someone refer to Social Security's
"guaranteed benefit"? The AARP says "Social Security is the guaranteed part
of your retirement plan." Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House,
touts the system's "guaranteed retirement benefit." The liberal activist
group ProtectYourCheck.org, headed by former Clinton chief of staff Harold
Ickes, is running ads calling Social Security "a guarantee you earned." But
Social Security benefits are not guaranteed. They are not guaranteed legally
because workers have no contractual or property rights to any benefits
whatsoever. In two landmark cases, Flemming v. Nestor and Helvering v.
Davis, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Social Security taxes are not
contributions or savings, but simply taxes, and that Social Security
benefits are simply a government spending program, no different than, say,
farm price supports. Congress and the president may change, reduce, or even
eliminate benefits at any time.
Michael Tanner, "Social Security's Sham Guarantee," Cato Institute, May 29,
2005 ---
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=3785
Problems facing Social Security and the
solvency of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.
Against the backdrop of rising concerns over both
public and private pension systems in the U.S., industry experts convened at
a recent Wharton conference to debate ways in which retirement programs can
be better managed. Participants discussed such topics as the problems facing
Social Security, the solvency of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., and the
consequences of an increase in defined contribution plans like 401(k)s along
with a corresponding decline in defined benefit plans. The conference was
titled "The Evolution of Risk and Reward Sharing in Retirement."
"Retirement Programs Face an "Aging-Population Tsunami"," Insurance and
Pensions at Wharton, University of Pennsylvania ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1205
What is "Intelligent Design" and is it
the outgrowth of religious fanatics?
While the events in Dover have received a good
deal of attention as a sign of the political times, there has been
surprisingly little discussion of the science that’s said to underlie the
theory of intelligent design, often called I.D. Many scientists avoid
discussing I.D. for strategic reasons. If a scientific claim can be loosely
defined as one that scientists take seriously enough to debate, then
engaging the intelligent-design movement on scientific grounds, they worry,
cedes what it most desires: recognition that its claims are legitimate
scientific ones . . . First of all, intelligent design is not what people
often assume it is. For one thing, I.D. is not Biblical literalism. Unlike
earlier generations of creationists—the so-called Young Earthers and
scientific creationists—proponents of intelligent design do not believe that
the universe was created in six days, that Earth is ten thousand years old,
or that the fossil record was deposited during Noah’s flood. (Indeed, they
shun the label “creationism” altogether.) Nor does I.D. flatly reject
evolution: adherents freely admit that some evolutionary change occurred
during the history of life on Earth. Although the movement is loosely allied
with, and heavily funded by, various conservative Christian groups—and
although I.D. plainly maintains that life was created—it is generally silent
about the identity of the creator. The movement’s main positive claim is
that there are things in the world, most notably life, that cannot be
accounted for by known natural causes and show features that, in any other
context, we would attribute to intelligence. Living organisms are too
complex to be explained by any natural—or, more precisely, by any
mindless—process. Instead, the design inherent in organisms can be accounted
for only by invoking a designer, and one who is very, very smart.
H. Allen Orr, "DEVOLUTION: Why intelligent design isn’t," The New Yorker,
May 30, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050530fa_fact
"Long Tails in Higher Education," by Saul
Fisher, Inside Higher Ed, May 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/27/fisher
Education experts often
wonder whether bestseller status among college courses might provide
lessons about educational markets and planning, just as popularity
shapes entertainment and cultural products. Such speculation has grown
with the advent of online education. Some argue that by making the most
popular courses virtual, colleges can slash costs, helping to pay for
low enrollment courses.
The alternative has been
to raise revenues for low-enrollment courses by adding enrollment. This
“add seats” approach has become more attractive in the new world of
online education. Which alternative makes more sense for colleges
considering online versions of some courses?
Cost-cutting
advocates suggest that great efficiencies may result from delivering
online a small set of popular undergraduate courses. Courses such as
Chemistry 101 or Introduction to European History would have large
enrollments and “basic” curricula. These popular courses illustrate the
“80-20 rule” — 20 percent of a resource typically generates 80 percent
of the possible benefits. Popular courses may not even constitute 20
percent of the catalogue’s contents, yet they often represent 80 percent
of enrollments. If that 80 percent can be served through automated,
virtual means, that should release tremendous savings, offsetting the
cost of courses that don’t lend themselves as easily or cheaply to
virtual delivery.
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on distance
education program costs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/distcost.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on distance
education alternatives are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/distcost.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on education
technology are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Going to Church May Improve Mental Health
People who regularly attend church, synagogue, or
other religious services are less likely to suffer from depression and other
psychiatric illnesses than those who don't.
Charlene Laino, "Going to Church May Improve Mental Health," WebMD,
May 26, 2005 ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/106/108248.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_03
Faculty Demographics
Asian faculty members hold three times the number
of positions of black faculty members at public doctoral universities, but
black faculty members outnumber Asian faculty members at community colleges,
according to new Education Department data. The data, released Thursday,
show that white faculty members hold the vast majority of full-time
positions in all sectors of higher education. But the proportion of jobs
differs from sector to sector. Private bachelor’s degree colleges had the
largest percentage of white faculty members (85.7). At private doctoral
universities, in contrast, 78.2 percent of faculty members are white.
Scott Jaschik, "Faculty Demographics," Inside Higher Ed, May 27, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/27/stats
Photos to Fight Phishing?
In a bid to stave off phishing attacks, Bank of America is offering a new
service that allows online customers to verify that they are indeed at the
bank's official site by displaying an image that the customer supplies in
advance. The service, called SiteKey and developed by Passmark Security of
Redwood City, Calif., lets customers pick any image they have, then write a
brief phrase and select three "challenge questions." When the customer next
visits bankofamerica.com and enters a username, clicking on the SiteKey
button displays their chosen image, embedded in the bank's site. Customers
are prompted to answer one of the challenge questions if they want to access
their account from a different computer . . . Bank of America says it has
the most online banking customers of any bank in the nation -- roughly 13.2
million of them. But that magnitude has also made it an attractive target
for phishing attacks. Just last month, the company was the victim of a
particularly sneaky exploit that leveraged a design flaw in
bankofamerica.com to redirect victims to an identical but fake site operated
by scammers waiting to steal login data.
Brian Krebs, "Photos to Fight Phishing?" The Washington Post, May 26,
2005 ---
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/?referrer=email
British Union Abandons Boycott
Britain’s main faculty union, bowing to pressure
from within its own ranks and from American scholarly groups, on Thursday
abandoned a boycott of two Israeli universities. The Association of
University Teachers issued a statement after a closed-door meeting stating:
“After a lengthy debate involving deeply held views on both sides of the
argument, AUT’s special council has today voted to revoke all existing
boycotts of Israeli institutions.” The union said it would work to provide
“practical solidarity to Palestinian and Israeli trade unionists and
academics” and also uphold “a long and proud tradition of defending academic
freedom.” The British faculty group in April announced the boycott of Bar-Ilan
University and the University of Haifa, saying that the two institutions
were complicit in Israel’s denial of rights to Palestinians. This month, the
faculty group announced that its members would get another chance to vote on
the issue, which they did on Thursday.
Scott Jaschik, "British Union Abandons Boycott," Inside Higher Ed,
May 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/27/boycott
Nanotech Grows Up
Nanotechnology research and development funding
almost doubled to more than $10 billion in 2004 from the previous year. Most
of the increase was driven by a big jump in corporate and private funding,
which grew by 160 percent, while government and academic research outlays on
nanotech R&D increased by a vigorous, but less outstanding, 37 percent.
Japan led the way, with expenditures approaching $4 billion; the United
States, however, was not far behind, with spending of about $3.4 billion.
The expected payoff for all this investment could be huge, even over the
next few years. Nanotech was already a $10 billion market last year, and
that is expected to triple by 2008. Much of that growth will result from new
nanomaterials. By 2008, more than $100 billion in products will likely
involve some type of nanotechnology. Still, only about half of Americans
have heard anything about nanotechnology. Much has been made of the
potential nanotech risks, from uncontrollable nanorobots to the breathing in
of nanoparticles. Not surprisingly, public fears are directly correlated
with the amount of knowledge that people have about nanotech: the less
knowledge, the more fear.
Stacy Lawrence, "Nanotech Grows Up," MIT's Technology Review, June
2006 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/06/issue/datamine.asp?trk=nl
Bob Jensen's threads on ubiquitous computing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ubiquit.htm
Ricoeur I
Paul Ricoeur — the philosopher whose writings on hermeneutics were
the cornerstone of an ambitious rethinking of the relationship
between the humanities and the social sciences — died on Friday at
the age of 92. By the late 1960s, American academic presses had made
him one of the first French thinkers of his generation with a
substantial body of work available in English. Even as an
octogenarian, he was more productive than many scholars half his
age. Late last year, the University of Chicago Press published
Memory, History, Forgetting — an enormous study of the conditions of
possibility for both historical writing and moral forgiveness. His
book The Course of Recognition is due from Harvard University Press
this fall. And Ricoeur himself provided the ideal survey of his life
and philosophical development in Critique and Commitment, a lively
set of interviews that Columbia University Press issued in 1998. At
the time of his death, he was professor emeritus at both the
University of Paris and the University of Chicago. “The entire
European humanist tradition is mourning one of its most talented
spokesmen,” said a statement from the office of Jean-Pierre Raffarin,
the prime minister of France, released over the weekend. And that
leads to a conundrum. It is Tuesday already, and nobody in the
American media has insulted Ricoeur yet. What’s going on? Have our
pundits lost their commitment to mocking European intellectuals and
the pointy-headed professors who read them? At first I thought it
might be that people were still tired from abusing Derrida following
his death last fall. But clearly that’s not it.
Scott McLemee, "Remembering Ricoeur," Inside Higher Ed, May
24, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/24/mclemee
Ricoeur II
"Listening to the Witness." by Scott McLemee, Inside Higher Ed, May 26, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/26/mclemee
On Tuesday, this column
lodged the (facetious) complaint that nobody had gotten around to
insulting the late Paul Ricoeur, who died last week. After all, in a
discursive culture of dog-eat-dog, the index of someone’s reputation is
the power to incite malevolence.
In the meantime, things
have gotten worse. The little bit of discussion so far has been quiet,
respectful, temperate. People even tend to express regret at not having
kept up with Ricoeur’s work. (This is by contrast with all the sarcastic
pieces about Derrida by people who seemed vaguely proud never to have
understood, or even necessarily read, a thing he published.) Scholars
are paying tribute to him, for heaven’s sake. No doubt this is all just
a phase, and we’ll soon return to our regularly scheduled programming.
It’s striking how often
the comments seem to echo a passage from Paul Ricoeur: His Life and His
Work, (University of Chicago Press, 1996) by Charles Reagan, a scholar
who was a student and friend of Ricoeur. “Above all,” he writes, “Paul
Ricoeur is a teacher of philosophy. He taught us to do a careful reading
of philosophical texts, to always give the most generous interpretation
to ambiguous or obscure texts, and to give full credit to those we have
read and from whom we have learned. His fundamental thesis as a
philosopher is that virtually every philosopher, ancient, modern, or
contemporary, has seen a piece of the truth. Now our task is to
adjudicate among competing interpretations, each of which claims to be
absolute.”
Since learning of his
death, I’ve been trying to figure out what would be involved in
introducing his work to someone who had never heard of Ricoeur — or
even, for that matter, of hermeneutics (the label subsuming most of his
work). In an interview, Ricoeur once made the rather amiable gesture of
suggesting that perhaps the very term “hermeneutics” could prove a
distraction. That perhaps it would be more convenient just to speak of
“interpretation,” since the words effectively covered the same
territory. In sketching the broad outlines of what he was doing, I’ll
take some courage from the philosopher’s willingness to translate
himself.
But first, a piece of
background information. (Perhaps that is the first lesson in any
hermeneutic primer: you never get to start from scratch, for there is
always some context you have to deal with.) During the 1940s and ’50s,
Ricoeur worked in the field of phenomenology — a philosophical approach
developed by Edmund Husserl in the earlier decades of the century to
analyze how any given mode of consciousness takes in and organizes the
world.
An astrologer, an
astronomer, and someone writing a love poem might all look at the same
object in the sky and call it “the moon.” But there is a sense in which
each of them is living in a different universe from the other two. Each
constitutes the world in a different way. Husserlian phenomenology
offers conceptual tools for describing the structure of each such world.
Ricoeur translated one of Husserl’s most important works, and also
published a volume of essays called Husserl: An Analysis of His
Phenomenology (Northwestern University Press, 1967) that is still one of
the best handbooks on the topic.
It would be fair to say
that phenomenology was an extremely thoroughgoing effort to follow
through on Descartes’ principle of stripping everything down to “I
think, therefore I am” and then rebuilding the world from there.
Ricoeur’s work begins to come into its own when he challenges the idea
that we can create an adequate philosophical anthropology (that is,
account of the nature of human beings) by starting out from “I think.”
After all, nobody is a
pure cogito. We act, as well as think. Besides cognition, there is will.
The cogito is absolute and certain. But the will and the power to act,
alas, are not. For one thing, much of our circumstance — including major
aspects of our identity — remains beyond our power to control. My
activity is conditioned by my circumstances, some aspects of which are
involuntary. Nobody chooses to be born in a particular place and time,
but those factors shape the range of one’s possible actions.
Does this sound vaguely
multiculturalist in its implications? With hindsight, I suppose that it
does. But in the form in which Ricoeur originally presented his
argument, it was much closer to a kind of utterly secularized notion of
original sin. It is an acknowledgment that the human condition is
defined by a yearning for power and absolute self-definition — but also
by a tendency to fail. (As Saint Paul puts it, “That which I would not
do, I do; and that which I would do, I do not.")
Ricoeur’s later
work on hermeneutics — his sometimes . . .
Continued in article
Ricoeur III
Last week, Margaret Soltan published a recollection
of Paul Ricoeur at her blog,
University
Diaries. He was, she noted, “Unfailingly
intellectually serious. No thigh-slapping, I can tell you that.” The one
exception was his delight in “a convoluted story he told about being in
Greece and seeing all these trucks that had METAPHOR written on them (this
was a seminar on metaphor). How could this be? Then he figured it out! They
were moving vans — metaphor is Greek for among other things, to carry! He
laughed with wild abandon at this.”Then, parenthetically, she apologizes if
her memory has played tricks on her. It didn’t. In the memoir portion of
Paul Ricoeur: His Life and His Work (University of Chicago, 1996), Charles
E. Reagan describes a visit with the philosopher in 1974, when he had just
finished writing The Rule of Metaphor: Multi-Disciplinary Studies of the
Creation of Meaning in Language (University of Toronto Press, 1978).
Scott McLemee, "Of Metaphors and Moving Vans," Inside Higher Ed, June
2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/06/02/mclemee
Washington Post trivia on May 26, 2005
Microsoft is working on a new Windows-based operating system designed to
help companies make older machines run better. What's the software's code
name?
A.
Cerberus
B.
Eastwood
C.
Eiger
D.
Hemlock
Washington Post trivia on May 25, 2005
The U.S. Business Software Alliance says the rate of global computer
software piracy was virtually unchanged last year. Which country tops the
BSA's list of nations with the highest percentage of pirated software?
A.
China
B.
Indonesia
C.
Ukraine
D.
Vietnam
Washington Post trivia on May 24, 2005
Wal-Mart is closing its online DVD rental business and will direct its
customers to Netflix. How many people subscribe to Netflix?
You can read about this at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/19/AR2005051901783.html
A.
13 million
B.
8 million
C.
3 million
D.
750,000
Washington Post trivia on May 23, 2005
What percentage of goods and services swapped on eBay's U.S. site go through
the online auction giant's Internet payment subsidiary, PayPal?
A.
90
B.
75
C.
50
D.
30
It's More Than Us They Hate
That is not as true elsewhere: Disgusted German
voters severely rebuked Chancellor Gerhard Schröder last weekend. The French
electorate prepares to embarrass President Jacques Chirac this weekend. The
Dutch argue bitterly over Europe and Muslims in their midst. Arabs and
Afghans riot over a specious Newsweek item about the Koran, even as Saudi
authorities quietly confiscate and destroy Bibles brought into the kingdom.
And through all this, the Greek prime minister has the nerve to be cheerful,
optimistic and even soothing about Turkey, the Balkans, Greek-American
relations and other subjects that have provoked verbal thunderbolts and mass
marches in Athens in the past.
Jim Hoagland, "It's More Than Us They Hate," The Wall Street Journal,
May 27, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111714428751544456,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
States with the dubious honor of having the dumbest drivers
The GMAC Insurance National Driver's Test found
that nearly 20 million Americans, or about 1 in 10 drivers, would fail a
state driver's test if they had to take one today. GMAC Insurance is part of
General Motors' finance subsidiary, GMAC. More than 5,000 licensed drivers
between the ages of 16 and 65 were administered a 20-question written test
designed to measure basic knowledge about traffic laws and safety. They were
also surveyed about their general driving habits. Drivers in the Northeast
and mid-Atlantic states did worst. Twenty percent of test-takers failed
there. The state of Rhode Island leads the nation in driver cluelessness,
according to the survey. The average test score there was 77, just eight
points above a failing grade. Those in neighboring Massachusetts were second
worst and New Jersey, third worst.
"Survey ranks states with dumbest drivers," CNN.com, May 27, 2005 ---
http://www.cnn.com/2005/AUTOS/05/26/drivers_study/index.html
Humor
History Exam forwarded by Paula
Everyone over 40 should have a pretty easy
time at this exam. If you are under 40 you can claim a handicap.
This is a History Exam for those who don't mind seeing how much they
really remember about what went on in their life. Get paper and pencil and
number from 1 to 20. Write the letter of each answer and score at the end.
1. In the 1940s, where were automobile headlight dimmer switches located?
a. On the floor shift knob b. On the floor board, to the left of the clutch
c. Next to the horn
2. The bottle top of a Royal Crown Cola bottle had holes in it. For what
was it used? a. Capture lightning bugs b. To sprinkle clothes before ironing
c. Large salt shaker
3. Why was having milk delivered a problem in northern winters? a. Cows
got cold and wouldn't produce milk b. Ice on highways forced delivery by dog
sled c. Milkmen left deliveries outside of front doors and milk would
freeze, expanding and pushing up the cardboard bottle top.
4. What was the popular chewing gum named for a game of chance? a.
Blackjack b. Gin c. Craps!
5. What method did women use to look as if they were wearing stockings
when none were available due to rationing during WWII? a. Suntan b. Leg
painting c. Wearing slacks
6. What postwar car turned automotive design on its ear when you couldn't
tell whether it was coming or going? a. Studebaker b. Nash Metro c. Tucker
7. Which was a popular candy when you were a kid? a. Strips of dried
peanut butter b. Chocolate licorice bars c. Wax coke-shaped bottles with
colored sugar water inside
8. How was Butch wax used? a. To stiffen a flat-top haircut so it stood
up b. To make floors shiny and prevent scuffing c. On the wheels of roller
skates to prevent rust
9. Before inline skates, how did you keep your roller skates attached to
your shoes? a. With clamps, tightened by a skate key b. Woven straps that
crossed the foot c. Long pieces of twine
10. As a kid, what was considered the best way to reach a decision? a.
Consider all the facts b. Ask Mom c. Eeny-meeny-miney-mo
11. What was the most dreaded disease in the 1940's? a. Smallpox b. AIDS
c. Polio
12. "I'll be down to get you in a ________, Honey" a. SUV b. Taxi c.
Streetcar
13. What was the name of Caroline Kennedy's pet pony? a. Old Blue b.
Paint c. Macaroni
14. What was a Duck-and-Cover Drill? a. Part of the game of hide and seek
b. What you did when your Mom called you in to do chores c. Hiding under
your desk, and covering your head with your arms in an A-bomb drill.
15. What was the name of the Indian Princess on the Howdy Doody show? a.
Princess Summerfallwinterspring b. Princess Sacajawea c. Princess Moonshadow
16. What did all the really savvy students do when mimeographed tests
were handed out in school? a. Immediately sniffed the purple ink, as this
was believed to get you high b. Made paper airplanes to see who could sail
theirs out the window c. Wrote another pupil's name on the top, to avoid
their failure
17. Why did your Mom shop in stores that gave Green Stamps with
purchases? a. To keep you out of mischief by licking the backs, which tasted
like bubble gum b. They could be put in special books and redeemed for
various household items c. They were given to the kids to be used as
stick-on tattoos
18. Praise the Lord, and pass the _________? a. Meatballs b. Dames c.
Ammunition
19. What was the name of the singing group that made the song "Cabdriver"
a hit? a. The Ink Spots b. The Supremes c. The Esquires
20. Who left his heart in San Francisco? a. Tony Bennett b. Xavier Cugat
c. George Gershwin
---------------------------------
-----------------------------------------
ANSWERS
1. b) On the floor, to the left of the clutch. Hand controls, popular in
Europe, took till the late '60s to catch on.
2. b) To sprinkle clothes before ironing. Who had a steam iron?
3. c) Cold weather caused the milk to freeze and expand, popping the
bottle top.
4. a) Blackjack Gum.
5. b) Special makeup was applied, followed by drawing a seam down the
back of the leg with eyebrow pencil.
6. a) 1946 Studebaker.
7. c) Wax coke bottles containing super-sweet colored water.
8. a) Wax for your flat top (butch) haircut.
9. a) With clamps, tightened by a skate key, which you wore on a
shoestring around your neck.
10. c) Eeny-meeny-miney-mo.
11. c) Polio. In beginning of August, swimming pools were closed, movies
and other public gathering places were closed to try to prevent spread of
the disease.
12. b) Taxi. Better be ready by half-past eight!
13. c) Macaroni.
14. c) Hiding under your desk, and covering your head with your arms in
an A-bomb drill.
15. a) Princess Summerfallwinterspring. She was another puppet.
16. a) Immediately sniffed the purple ink to get a high.
17. b) Put in a special stamp book, they could be traded for household
items at the Green Stamp store.
18. c) Ammunition, and we'll all be free.
19. a) The widely famous 50's group: The Inkspots.
20. a) Tony Bennett, and he sounds just as good today..
----------------------------------------------------------------------
SCORING
17- 20 correct: You are older than dirt, and obviously gifted with mental
abilities. Now if you could only find your glasses. Definitely someone who
should share your wisdom!
12 -16 correct: Not quite dirt yet, but you're getting there.
0 -11 correct: You are not old enough to share the wisdom of your
experiences.
Forwarded by Paula
How to sing the blues:
1. Most Blues begin with: "Woke up this morning..."
2. "I got a good woman" is a bad way to begin the Blues unless you stick
something nasty in the next line like "I got a good woman with the meanest
face in town."
3. The Blues is simple. After you get the first line right, repeat it.
Then find something that rhymes, sort of: "Got a good woman with the meanest
face in town. Yes, I got a good woman with the meanest face in town. Got
teeth like Margaret Thatcher, and she weigh 500 pound."
4. The Blues is not about choice. You stuck in a ditch, you stuck in a
ditch. There ain't no way out.
5. Blues cars: Chevys, Fords, Cadillacs and broken-down trucks. Blues
don't travel in Volvos, BMWs, or SUVs. Most Blues transportation is a
Greyhound bus or a southbound train. Jet aircraft and state-sponsored motor
pools ain't even in the running. Walkin' plays a major part in the blues
lifestyle. So does fixin' to die.
6. Teenagers can't sing the Blues. They ain't fixin' to die yet. Adults
sing the Blues. In Blues, "adulthood" means being old enough to get the
electric chair if you shoot a man in Memphis.
7. Blues can take place in New York City but not in Hawaii or anyplace in
Canada. Hard times in Minneapolis or Seattle is probably just clinical
depression. Chicago, St. Louis, and Kansas City are still great places to
have the Blues. You cannot have the blues anyplace that don't get rain.
8. A man with male pattern baldness ain't the Blues. A woman with male
pattern baldness is. Breaking your leg 'cause you were skiing is not the
blues. Breaking your leg 'cause a alligator be chomping on it is.
9. You can't have no Blues in a office or a shopping mall. The lighting
is wrong. Go out to the parking lot or sit by the dumpster.
10. Good places for the Blues:
a. highway b. jailhouse c. empty bed d. bottom of a whiskey glass
11. Bad places for the Blues:
a. Nordstrom's b. gallery openings c. Ivy League colleges d. golf courses
12. No one will believe it's the Blues if you wear a suit, 'less you
happen to be an old, ethnic person, and you slept in it.
13. Do you have the right to sing the Blues?
Yes, if:
a. you older than dirt b. you blind c. you shot a man in Memphis d. you
can't be satisfied
No, if:
a. you have all your teeth b. you were once blind but now can see c. the
man in Memphis lived d. you have a 401K or trust fund
14. Blues is not a matter of colour. It's a matter of bad luck. Tiger
Woods cannot sing the blues. Sonny Liston could. Ugly white people also got
a leg up on the blues.
15. If you ask for water and your darlin' give you gasoline, it's the
Blues.
Other acceptable Blues beverages are: a. cheap wine b. whiskey or bourbon
c. muddy water d. nasty black coffee
The following are NOT Blues beverages:
a. Perrier b. Chardonnay c. Snapple d. Slim Fast
16. If death occurs in a cheap motel or a shotgun shack, it's a Blues
death. Stabbed in the back by a jealous lover is another Blues way to die.
So are the electric chair, substance abuse and dying lonely on a broken-down
cot.
You can't have a Blues death if you die during a tennis match or while
getting liposuction.
17. Some Blues names for women:
a. Sadie b. Big Mama c. Bessie d. Fat River Dumpling
18. Some Blues names for men:
a. Joe b. Willie c. Little Willie d. Big Willie
19. Persons with names like Amber, Jennifer, Tiffany, Debbie, and Heather
can't sing the Blues no matter how many men they shoot in Memphis.
20. Make your own Blues name Starter Kit:
a. name of physical infirmity (Blind, Cripple, Lame, etc.) b. first name
(see above) plus name of fruit (Lemon, Lime, etc..) c. last name of
President (Jefferson, Johnson, Fillmore, etc.) Examples: Blind Lime
Jefferson, Jackleg Lemon Johnson.
20. No matter how tragic your life, if you own a computer you cannot sing
the blues.
Forwarded by Paula
Birds of a feather flock together and crap on your car.
When I'm feeling down, I like to whistle. It makes the neighbor's dog run
to the end of his chain and gag himself.
If you can't be kind, at least have the decency to be vague.
Don't assume malice for what stupidity can explain.
A penny saved is a government oversight.
The real art of conversation is not only to say the right thing at the
right time, but also to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment.
The older you get, the tougher it is to lose weight, because by then your
body and your fat have gotten to be really good friends.
The easiest way to find something lost around the house is to buy a
replacement.
He who hesitates is probably right.
Did you ever notice: The Roman Numerals for forty (40) are " XL."
If you think there is good in everybody, you haven't met everybody.
If you can smile when things go wrong, you have someone in mind to blame.
The sole purpose of a child's middle name is so he can tell when he's
really in trouble.
There's always a lot to be thankful for if you take time to look for it.
For example I am sitting here thinking how nice it is that wrinkles don't
hurt.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
* Your fences need to be horse-high, pig-tight and bull-strong.
* Keep skunks and bankers and lawyers at a distance.
* Life is simpler when you plow around the stump.
* A bumble bee is considerably faster than a John Deere tractor.
* Words that soak into your ears are whispered...not yelled.
* Meanness don't jes' happen overnight.
* Forgive your enemies. It messes up their heads.
* Do not corner something that you know is meaner than you.
* It don't take a very big person to carry a grudge.
* You cannot unsay a cruel word.
* Every path has a few puddles.
* When you wallow with pigs, expect to get dirty.
* The best sermons are lived, not preached.
* Most of the stuff people worry about ain't never gonna happen anyway.
* Don't judge folks by their relatives.
* Remember that silence is sometimes the best answer.
* Live a good, honorable life. Then when you get older and think back,
you'll enjoy it a second time.
* Don't interfere with somethin' that ain't botherin' you none.
* Timing has a lot to do with the outcome of a rain dance.
* If you find yourself in a hole, the first thing to do is stop diggin'.
* Sometimes you get, and sometimes you get got.
* The biggest troublemaker you'll probably ever have to deal with,
watches you from the mirror every mornin'.
* Always drink upstream from the herd.
* Good judgment comes from experience, and a lotta that comes from bad
judgment.
* Lettin' the cat outta the bag is a whole lot easier than puttin' it
back in.
* If you get to thinkin' you're a person of some influence, try orderin'
somebody else's dog around.
* Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply. Speak kindly. Leave the rest
to God...
Forwarded by Paula
Some good ones here.... Actual answer machine messages
1. My wife and I can't come to the phone right now, but if you'll leave
your name and number we'll get back to you as soon as we're finished.
2. A is for academics, B is for beer. One of those reasons is why we're
not here. So leave a message.
3. Hi. This is John: If you are the phone company, I already sent the
money. If you are my parents, please send money. If you are my financial aid
institution, you didn't lend me enough money. If you are my friends, you owe
me money. If you are a female, don't worry I have plenty of money.
4. Hi. Now you say something.
5. Hi, I'm not home right now but my answering machine is, so you can
talk to it instead. Wait for the beep.
6. Hello. I am David's answering machine. What are you?
7. (From Japanese friend): He-lo! This is Sa-to, If you leave message, I
call you soon. If you leave "sexy" message I call sooner!
8. Hi. John's answering machine is broken. This is the refrigerator.
Please speak very slowly, and I'll stick your message to myself with one of
these magnets.
9. Hello, you are talking to a machine. I am capable of receiving
messages. My owners do not need siding, windows, or a hot tub, and their
carpets are clean. They give to charity through their office and do not need
their picture taken. If you're still with me, leave your name and number and
they will get back to you.
11. Hi. I am probably home. I'm just avoiding someone I don't like. Leave
me a message, and if I don't call back, it's you.
12. If you are a burglar, then we're probably home cleaning our weapons
right now and can't come to the phone. Otherwise, we probably aren't home
and it's safe to leave a message.
13. Plea se leave a message. However, you have the right to remain
silent. Everything you say will be recorded and will be used by us.
14. Hello, you've reached Jim and Sonya. We can't pick up the phone right
now because we're doing something we really enjoy. Sonya likes doing it up
and down, and I like doing it left to right... real slow.... So leave a
message, and when we get done brushing our teeth we'll get back to you
Forwarded by Paula
Two robins were sitting in a tree.
"I'm really hungry," said the first one. "Let's fly down and find some
lunch."
They flew down to the ground and found a nice plot of newly plowed ground
that was full of worms. They ate and ate and ate till they could eat no
more.
"I'm so full, I don't think I can fly back up into the tree," said the
first one.
"Let's just lay back here and bask in the warm sun," said the second.
"O K," said the first.
So they plopped down, basking in the sun. No sooner than they had fallen
asleep, when a big fat tomcat up and gobbled them up.
As the cat sat washing his face after his meal, he thought... "I JUST
LOVE BASKIN ROBINS."
Some old and some new accounting humor forwarded by
Paula
A businessman was interviewing applicants for the position of divisional
manager. He devised a simple test to select the most suitable person for the
job. He asked each applicant the question, "What is two and two?" The first
interviewee was a journalist. His answer was "twenty-two."
The second applicant was an engineer. He pulled out a calculator and
showed the answer to be between 3.999 and 4.001.
The next person was a lawyer. He stated that in the case of Jenkins v.
Commr of Stamp Duties (Qld), two and two was proven to be four.
The last applicant was an accountant. The business man asked him, "How
much is two and two?"
The accountant to be got up from his chair, went over to the door, closed
it then came back and sat down. He leaned across the desk and said in a low
voice,
"How much do you want it to be?" He got the job.
-------------
What's the definition of an accountant?
Someone who solves a problem you didn't know you had in a way you don't
understand.
-------------
What's the definition of a good tax accountant?
Someone who has a loophole named after him.
-------------
What's an extroverted accountant?
One who looks at your shoes while they talking to you instead of his own.
-------------
Why did the auditor cross the road?
Because he looked in the file and that's what they did last year.
-------------
There are three kinds of accountants in the world. Those who can count
and those who can't.
-------------
An accountant is having a hard time sleeping and goes to see his doctor.
"Doctor, I just can't get to sleep at night."
"Have you tried counting sheep?"
"That's the problem - I make a mistake and then spend three hours trying
to find it"
--------------
Comprehending Accountants - Take One
Two accountancy students were walking across campus when one said, "Where
did you get such a great bike?" The second accountant replied, "Well, I was
walking along yesterday minding my own business when a beautiful woman rode
up on this bike. She threw the bike to the ground, took off all her clothes
and said, "Take what you want." The second accountant nodded
approvingly,"Good choice; the clothes probably wouldn't have fit."
Comprehending Accountants - Take Two
An architect, an artist and an accountant were discussing whether it was
better to spend time with the wife or a mistress.
The architect said he enjoyed time with his wife, building a solid
foundation for an enduring relationship.
The artist said he enjoyed time with his mistress, because of the passion
and mystery he found there.
The accountant said, "I like both."
"Both?"
The accountant replied "Yeah. If you have a wife and a mistress, they
will each assume you are spending time with the other woman, and you can go
to the office and get some work done."
Comprehending Accountants - Take Three
To the optimist, the glass is half full.
To the pessimist, the glass is half empty.
To the accountant, the glass is twice as big as it needs to be.
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting humor are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Four women were driving across the country. Each one
was from a different state: Idaho, Nebraska, Florida and New York. Shortly
after the trip began, the woman from Idaho started pulling potatoes from her
bag and throwing them out of the window. "What the heck are you doing?"
demanded the Nebraskan. "We have so many of these darn things in Idaho, I am
just sick of looking at them!"A moment later, the gal from Nebraska began
pulling ears of corn from her bag and tossing them from the window. "What
are you doing that for?" asked the gal from Florida. "We have so many of
these things in Nebraska, I am just sick of looking at them!" Inspired, the
woman from Florida opened the car door and pushed the New Yorker out.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
ANNUAL NEOLOGISM CONTEST
Once again, The Washington Post has published the winning submissions to
its yearly contest, in which readers are asked to supply alternate meanings
for common words.
The winners are:
1. Coffee (n.), the person upon whom one coughs.
2. Flabbergasted (adj.), appalled over how much weight you have gained.
3 . Abdicate (v.), to give up all hope of ever having a flat stomach.
4. Esplanade (v.), to attempt an explanation while drunk.
5. Willy-nilly (adj.), impotent.
6. Negligent (adj.), describes a condition in which you absentmindedly
answer the door in your nightgown.
7. Lymph (v.), to walk with a lisp.
8. Gargoyle (n.), olive-flavored mouthwash.
9. Flatulence (n.) emergency vehicle that picks you up after you are run
over by a steamroller.
10. Balderdash (n.), a rapidly receding hairline.
11. Testicle (n.), a humorous question on an exam.
12. Rectitude (n.), the formal, dignified bearing adopted by
proctologists.
13. Pokemon (n), a Rastafarian proctologist.
14. Oyster (n.), a person who sprinkles his conversation with
Yiddishisms.
15. Frisbeetarianism (n.), the belief that, when you die, your Soul flies
up onto the roof and gets stuck there.
16. Circumvent (n.), an opening in the front of boxer shorts worn by
Jewish men.
``````````` The Washington Post's Style Invitational once again asked
readers to take any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding,
subtracting, or changing one letter, and supply a new definition. Here are
this year's winners:
1. Bozone (n.): The substance surrounding stupid people that stops bright
ideas from penetrating. The bozone layer, unfortunately, shows little sign
of breaking down in the near future.
2. Foreploy (v): Any misrepresentation about yourself for the purpose of
getting laid.
3. Cashtration (n.): The act of buying a house, which renders the subject
financially impotent for an indefinite period.
4. Giraffiti (n): Vandalism spray-painted very, very high.
5. Sarchasm (n): The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the
person who doesn't get it.
6. Inoculatte (v): To take coffee intravenously when you are running
late.
7. Hipatitis (n): Terminal coolness.
8. Osteopornosis (n): A degenerate disease. (This one got extra credit.)
9 . Karmageddon (n): It's like, when everybody is sending off all these
really bad vibes, right? And then, like, the Earth explodes and it's like, a
serious bummer.
10 .Decafalon (n.): The grueling event of getting through the day
consuming only things that are good for you.
11. Glibido (v): All talk and no action.
12 .Dopeler effect (n): The tendency of stupid ideas to seem smarter when
they come at you rapidly.
13. Arachnoleptic fit (n.): The frantic dance performed just after you've
accidentally walked through a spider web.
14. Beelzebug (n.): Satan in the form of a mosquito that gets into your
bedroom at three in the morning and cannot be cast out.
15. Caterpallor (n.): The color you turn after finding half a grub in the
fruit you're eating.
And the pick of the literature:
16. Ignoranus (n): A person who's both stupid and an asshole.
Forwarded by Betty Carper
NEVER SAY TO A COP
1. I can't reach my license unless you hold my beer. (OK in Texas)
2. Sorry, Officer, I didn't realize my radar detector wasn't plugged in.
3. Aren't you the guy from the Village People?
4. Hey, you must've been doin' about 125 mph to keep up with me. Good
job!
5. Are You Andy or Barney?
6. I thought you had to be in relatively good physical condition to be a
police officer.
7. You're not gonna’ check the trunk, are you?
8. I pay your salary!
9. Gee, Officer! That's terrific. The last officer only gave me a
warning, too!
10. Do you know why you pulled me over? Okay, just so one of us does.
11. I was trying to keep up with traffic. Yes, I know there are no other
cars around.. That's how far ahead of me they are.
12. When the Officer says "Gee .Your eyes look red, have you been
drinking?" You probably shouldn't respond with,"Gee Officer your eyes look
glazed, have you been eating doughnuts?"
Forwarded by David Albrecht
The Deaf Accountant
Mafia Godfather finds out that his bookkeeper has screwed him for ten
million bucks.
This bookkeeper is deaf. It was considered an occupational benefit, and
why he got the job in the first place, since it was assumed that a deaf
bookkeeper would not be able to hear anything he'd ever have to testify
about in court.
When the Godfather goes to shake down the bookkeeper about his missing
$10 million bucks, he brings along his attorney, who knows sign language.
The Godfather asks the bookkeeper: "Where is the 10 million bucks you
embezzled from me?"
The attorney, using sign language, asks the bookkeeper where the 10
million dollar is hidden.
The bookkeeper signs back: "I don't know what you are talking about."
The attorney tells the Godfather: "He says he doesn't know what you're
talking about."
That's when the Godfather pulls out a 9 mm pistol, puts it to the
bookkeeper's temple, cocks it, and says: "Ask him again!"
The attorney signs to the underling: "He'll kill you for sure if you
don't tell him!"
The bookkeeper signs back: "OK! You win! The money is in a brown
briefcase, buried behind the shed in my cousin Enzio's backyard in Queens!"
The Godfather asks the attorney: "Well, what'd he say?" The attorney
replies: "He says you don't have the guts to pull the trigger.
Don't ya just love lawyers?
Quotes from Woody Allen ---
http://www.lifeisajoke.com/woodyswit_html.htm
Is sex dirty? Only if it's done right. (Everything You Always
Wanted to Know About Sex)
That [sex] was the most fun I ever had without laughing. (Annie
Hall)
Don't knock masturbation, it's sex with someone I love. (Annie
Hall)
Sex without love is an empty experience, but as empty experiences
go, it's one of the best.
Sex between a man and a woman can be absolutely wonderful -
provided you get between the right man and the right woman.
My love life is terrible. The last time I was inside a woman was
when I visited the Statue of Liberty.
Love is the answer - but while you're waiting for the answer, sex
raises some pretty interesting questions.
I'm such a good lover because I practise a lot on my own.
The food in this place is really terrible. Yes, and such small
portions. That's essentially how I feel about life. (Annie Hall)
If it turns out that there is a God, I don't think that he's
evil. But the worst that you can say about him is that basically
he's an underachiever. (Love and Death)
I'm short enough and ugly enough to succeed on my own. (Play it
Again Sam)
I'm really a timid person - I was beaten up by Quakers.
(Sleepers)
My brain - it's my second favorite organ. (Sleeper)
Q. Have you ever taken a serious political stand on anything? A.
Yeah. Sure. For twenty-four hours once I refused to eat grapes.
(Sleeper)
Eternal nothingness is fine if you happen to be dressed for it.
(Getting Even, 'My Philosophy')
Not only is there no God, but try getting a plumber on weekends.
(New Yorker, 'My Philosophy')
The lion and the calf shall lie down together but the calf won't
get much sleep. (Without Feathers, 'The Scrolls')
It's not that I'm afraid to die. I just don't want to be there
when it happens. (Death)
The thing to remember is that each time of life has its
appropriate rewards, whereas when you're dead it's hard to find the
light switch. The chief problem about death, incidentally, is the
fear that there may be no afterlife - a depressing thought,
particularly for those who have bothered to shave. Also, there is
the fear that there is an afterlife but no one will know where it's
being held. On the plus side, death is one of the few things that
can be done as easily lying down. (The Early Essays)
Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons. (The
Early Essays)
I was thrown out of college for cheating on the metaphysics exam:
I looked into the soul of another boy. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of
American Humor)
My parents were very old world. They come from Brooklyn, which is
the heart of the Old World. Their values in life are God and
carpeting. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of American Humor)
I have never been an intellectual but I have this look.
A fast word about oral contraception. I asked a girl to sleep
with me and she said 'no'. (Woody Allen Volume Two)
I am at two with nature. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of American
Humor)
Some guy hit my fender, and I told him 'be fruitful, and
multiply.' But not in those words. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of
American Humor)
I wanted to be an arch-criminal as a child, before I discovered I
was too short. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of American Humor)
I asked the girl if she could bring a sister for me. She did.
Sister Maria Teresa. It was a very slow evening. We discussed the
New Testament. We agreed that He was very well adjusted for an only
child. (Woody Allen: Clown Prince of American Humor)
And my parents finally realize that I'm kidnapped and they snap
into action immediately: they rent out my room. (Woody Allen and His
Comedy)
My one regret in life is that I am not someone else. (Woody Allen
and His Comedy)
Death is an acquired trait. (Woody Allen and His Comedy)
I don't want to achieve immortality through my work…I want to
achieve it through not dying. (Woody Allen and His Comedy)
I took a speed reading course and read War and Peace in twenty
minutes. It's about Russia. (Quote and Unquote)
Take the money and run. (Film title)
If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large
deposit in my name at a Swiss bank. (Selections from the Allen
Notebooks, New Yorker)
On bisexuality: It immediately doubles your chances for a date on
Saturday night. (New York Times)
I recently turned sixty. Practically a third of my life is over.
(Sayings of the Week, Observer)
I had a terrible education. I attended a school for emotionally
disturbed teachers.
Another good thing about being poor is that when you are seventy
your children will not have declared you legally insane in order to
gain control of your estate.
The baby is fine. The only problem is that he looks like Edward
G. Robinson.
I'm astounded by people who want to 'know' the universe when it's
so hard to find your way around Chinatown.
How can I believe in God when justlast week I got my tongue
caught in the roller of an electric typewriter?
I sold the memoirs of my sex life to a publisher - they are going
to make a board game out of it.
Basically my wife was immature. I'd be in my bath and she'd come
in and sink my boats.
If there is reincarnation, I'd like to come back as Warren
Beatty's fingertips.
The only time my wife and I had a simultaneous orgasm was when
the judge signed the divorce papers.
I do not believe in an after life, although I am bringing a
change of underwear.
If you want to make God laugh, tell him your future plans.
If you're not failing every now and again, it's a sign you're not
doing anything very innovative.
There are two types of people in this world: good and bad. The
good sleep better, but the bad seem to enjoy the waking hours much
more .
More than any time in history mankind faces a crossroads. One
path leads to despair and utter hopelessness, the other to total
extinction. Let us pray that we have the wisdom to choose correctly.
What if everything is an illusion and nothing exists? In that
case, I definitely overpaid for my carpet.
Interestingly, according to modern astronomers, space is finite.
This is a very comforting thought - particularly for people who can
never remember where they have left things.
94.5% of all statistics are made up.
Why ruin a good story with the truth?
Sex is like having dinner: sometimes you joke about the dishes,
sometimes you take the meal seriously.
It is impossible to travel faster than light and certainly not
desirable, as one's hat keeps blowing off...
I failed to make the chess team because of my height.
Sex between 2 people is a beautiful thing. Between 5, it's
fantastic.
I'm very proud of my gold pocket watch. My grandfather, on his
deathbed, sold me this watch.
I don't think my parents liked me. They put a live teddy bear in
my crib.
Forwarded by Paula
"Why God made moms" answers given by 2nd grade school children to the
following questions.
Why did God make mothers? 1. She's the only one who knows where the
scotch tape is. 2. Mostly to clean the house. 3. To help us out of there
when we were getting born.
How did God make mothers? 1. He used dirt, just like for the rest of us.
2. Magic plus super powers and a lot of stirring. 3. God made my Mom just
the same like he made me. He Just used bigger parts.
What ingredients are mothers made of? 1. God makes mothers out of clouds
and angel hair and everything nice in the world and one dab of mean. 2. They
had to get their start from men's bones. Then they mostly use string, I
think.
Why did God give you your mother and not some other Mom? 1. We're
related. 2. God knew she likes me a lot more than other people's moms like
me.
What kind of little girl was your Mom? 1. My Mom has always been my Mom
and none of that other stuff. 2. I don't know because I wasn't there, but my
guess would be pretty bossy. 3. They say she used to be nice.
What did Mom need to know about dad before she married him? 1. His last
name. 2. She had to know his background. Like is he a crook? Does he get
drunk on beer? 3. Does he make at least $800 a year? Did he say NO to drugs
and YES to chores?
Why did your Mom marry your dad? 1. My dad makes the best spaghetti in
the world. And my Mom eats a lot. 2. She got too old to do anything else
with him. 3. My grandma says that Mom didn't have her thinking cap on.
Who's the boss at your house? 1. Mom doesn't want to be boss, but she has
to because dad's such a goof ball. 2. Mom. You can tell by room inspection.
She sees the stuff under the bed. 3. I guess Mom is, but only because she
has a lot more to do than dad.
What's the difference between moms and dads? 1. Moms work at work and
work at home, & dads just go to work at work. 2. Moms know how to talk to
teachers without scaring them. 3. Dads are taller & stronger, but moms have
all the real power cause that's who you got to ask if you want to sleep over
at your friend's. 4. Moms have magic, they make you feel better without
medicine.
What does your Mom do in her spare time? 1. Mothers don't do spare time.
2. To hear her tell it, she pays bills all day long.
What would it take to make your Mom perfect? 1. On the inside she's
already perfect. Outside, I think some kind of plastic surgery. 2. Diet. You
know, her hair. I'd diet, maybe blue.
If you could change one thing about your Mom, what would it be? 1. She
has this weird thing about me keeping my room clean. I'd get rid of that. 2.
I'd make my Mom smarter. Then she would know it was my sister who did it and
not me. 3. I would like for her to get rid of those invisible eyes on her
back of her head.
Forwarded by Betty Carper
This is cute I hope it makes the trip to your computer
BEHIND EVERY SUCCESSFUL WOMAN IS HERSELF
A WOMAN IS LIKE A TEA BAG... YOU DON'T KNOW HOW STRONG SHE IS UNTIL YOU
PUT HER IN HOT WATER
I HAVE YET TO HEAR A MAN ASK FOR ADVICE ON HOW TO COMBINE MARRIAGE AND A
CAREER
COFFEE, CHOCOLATE, MEN. SOME THINGS ARE JUST BETTER RICH
I'M OUT OF ESTROGEN And I HAVE A GUN
WARNING: I HAVE AN ATTITUDE AND I KNOW HOW TO USE IT
OF COURSE I DON'T LOOK BUSY... I DID IT RIGHT THE FIRST TIME
DO NOT START WITH ME. YOU WILL NOT WIN
ALL STRESSED OUT AND NO ONE TO CHOKE
And last but not least:
IF YOU WANT BREAKFAST IN BED, SLEEP IN THE KITCHEN
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Modern Aphorisms
-
Home is where you hang your @
-
The E-mail of the species is more deadly than the mail..
-
A journey of a thousand sites begins with a single click..
-
You can't teach a new mouse old clicks..
-
Great groups from little icons grow..
-
Speak softly and carry a cellular phone..
-
C:\ is the root of all directories..
-
Don't put all your hypes in one home page..
-
Pentium wise; pen and paper foolish..
-
The modem is the message..
-
Too many clicks spoil the browse..
-
The geek shall inherit the earth..
-
A chat has nine lives..
-
Don't byte off more than you can view..
-
Fax is stranger than fiction..
-
What boots up must come down..
-
Windows will never cease..
-
Virtual reality is its own reward..
-
Modulation in all things..
-
A user and his leisure time are soon parted.
-
There's no place like
http://www.home.com
-
Know what to expect before you connect..
-
Oh, what a tangled website we weave when first we practice...
-
Speed thrills.
-
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the
Web and he won't bother you for weeks
Forwarded by Betty Carper
LETTER FROM A FARM KID,
NOW AT PARRIS ISLAND MARINE CORPS RECRUIT TRAINING PLACE.
Dear Ma and Pa, I am well. Hope you are. Tell Brother Walt and Brother
Elmer the Marine Corps beats working for old man Minch by a mile. Tell them
to join up quick before all of the places are filled. I was restless at
first because you got to stay in bed till nearly 6 a.m. But I am getting so
I like to sleep late. Tell Walt and Elmer all you do before breakfast is
smooth your cot, and shine some things. No hogs to slop, feed to pitch, mash
to mix, wood to split, fire to lay. Practically nothing.
Men got to shave but it is not so bad, there's warm water. Breakfast is
strong on trimmings like fruit juice, cereal, eggs, bacon, etc., but kind of
weak on chops, potatoes, ham, steak, fried eggplant, pie and other regular
food, but tell Walt and Elmer you can always sit by the two city boys that
live on coffee. Their food plus yours holds you til noon when you get fed
again. It's no wonder these city boys can't walk much.
We go on "route marches," which the drill instructor says are long walks
to harden us. If he thinks so, it's not my place to tell him different. A
"route march" is about as far as to our mailbox at home. Then the city guys
get sore feet and we all ride back in trucks. The country is nice but awful
flat The sergeant is like a school teacher. He nags a lot. The Captain is
like the school board. Majors and colonels just ride around and frown. They
don't bother you none.
This next will kill Walt and Elmer with laughing. I keep getting medals
for shooting. I don't know why. The bulls-eye is near as big as a chipmunk
head and don't move, and it ain't shooting at you like the Higgett boys at
home. All you got to do is lie there all comfortable and hit it. You don't
even load your own cartridges. They come in boxes.
Then we have what they call hand-to-hand combat training. You get to
wrestle with them city boys. I have to be real careful though, they break
real easy. It ain't like fighting with that ole bull at home. I'm about the
best they got in this except for that Tug Jordan from over in Silver Lake. I
only beat him once. He joined up the same time as me, but I'm only 5'6" and
130 pounds and he's 6'8" and near 300 pounds dry.
Be sure to tell Walt and Elmer to hurry and join before other fellers get
onto this setup and come stampeding in.
Your loving daughter,
Carol
Forwarded by Maria
Join the adventures of Cuke Skywalker, Obi-Wan Cannoli, Chewbroccoli and
the rest of the Organic Rebels fighting against Darth Tader and the Dark
Side of the Farm ---
http://www.StoreWars.org
Forwarded by Paula
Redneck Video Game
http://www.shockhaber.com/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.htm
Click with the mouse and watch your score (in lower right corner) go up!
For women to enjoy; For men to learn from..... :>)
http://goldengirls03.org/WomensWorld.htm
And that's the way it was on May 31,
2005 with a little help from my friends.
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You
have to scroll down to the titles) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics ---
http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research Videos from Harvard University ---
http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor
(an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart
finance professor, Jim Mahar from St. Bonaventure University) ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting
newsletters are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from
TheCycles.com ---
http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com
are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information
Finder ---
http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links ---
http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best
international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to
questions in technology ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works ---
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style
Hints ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm
and
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on
www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for
a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers
and education technology experts in higher education from around the
country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email:
rjensen@trinity.edu
May 12, 2005
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on May 12,
2005
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Fraud Updates
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about
the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
Real time
meter of the U.S. cost of the war in Iraq ---
http://www.costofwar.com/
For Quotations and Tidbits from May 1-May 15, 2005 go to
Quotations and Tidbits
The entire Tidbits Directory is at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsdirectory.htm
For Humor of the Week go to
Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
My communications on
"Hypocrisy in Academia and the Media" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm
My “Evil
Empire” essay ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
"Microsoft delivers first Maestro beta Server-based
package works with Office," by Ed Scannell, InfoWorld, May 10, 2005
---
http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/05/10/HNmaestro_1.html
Claiming it represents a
significant step forward in its business intelligence strategy,
Microsoft (Profile, Products, Articles) on Tuesday is selectively
introducing the first beta of Maestro, a code name for a server-based
application that helps corporate users build scorecards to monitor and
improve company performance.
The strategic intent of Maestro is to drive
down business intelligence capabilities to the desktop so customers can
use the applications associated with Microsoft's Office System to better
track their company's performance relative to the overall goals they
have set for themselves, company officials said.
"It [Maestro] basically moves business
intelligence from being report-centric to being more metric-centric,
meaning managers and their workers who want to view KPIs (Key
Performance Indicators) can do it via a Web page," said Chris Caren,
General Manager at Microsoft's Office Business Applications Group. "And
because it is built into the Office System and SharePoint, it has
collaboration capabilities that let users analyze performance with their
peers," he said.
Microsoft officials said Maestro represents its
ongoing commitment to business intelligence, which they see as a crucial
piece of technology for its Information Worker Business. That group
specializes in helping individuals, teams, and organizations to be more
productive through the various pieces that make up the Microsoft Office
System.
Explaining how the product works, Caren said
Maestro sits on top of the company's SQL Server database, which is
commonly used for building data warehouses and for populating and
tracking metrics. Maestro can be used to expose metrics that reside in
SQL Server, allowing users to author or define new KPIs they write, and
which SQL Server then tracks.
Continued in the article
For definitions of terms like SQL, go to
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Relational1
Things to note when switching from Windows to the
Mac operating system
Tired of Computer Viruses, Spyware, and all the Other Microsoft
Diseases?
Switch to a Mac
If you switch to a Mac, a must book is Mac OS X: The Missing
Manual by David Pogue
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0596000820/002-3743809-1628824?v=glance
This book
explains how to translate what you liked to do in Windows into how to do
the same things on a Mac.
"Transferring Files to a Mac," by Walter Mossberg, The
Wall Street Journal, May 5, 2005; Page B4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111525031544325273,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Q: I am thinking of switching from my Windows
notebook to an Apple PowerBook. My question is whether my years of Word,
PowerPoint and PDF files really will work seamlessly on the Mac. Apple
says they will, but I wonder if you have any experience in this matter.
A: In my experience, your Word and PowerPoint
files (as well as Excel files) will work fine on a Mac, if you buy the
Macintosh version of Microsoft Office. The Mac version uses the exact
same file formats as the Windows version, and it can read files created
in the Windows version without requiring any conversion or translation.
Files you create in the Mac version can be read by the Windows version
just as well.
Some complex Word and PowerPoint files don't
carry over perfectly. Depending on how the file was created, graphics
may not be aligned correctly and some fonts may not be the same. But, in
my experience, these issues are rare for typical documents created most
of the time by most users.
As for Adobe's PDF files, they are truly
cross-platform. There are Mac versions of Adobe's free Reader program
and its full Acrobat program, for creating and handling PDF files, and
they are essentially identical to the Windows versions. But you don't
even need Adobe software to handle PDF files on a Mac. Out of the box,
every Mac can read -- and even create -- PDF files, using built-in
software provided by Apple.
I switch between Windows PCs and Macs all day,
every day, and find these file-compatibility problems to be nonexistent.
Sometimes, I start a column on a Windows PC using Word for Windows, then
email the partial draft to myself, and open it on a Mac and finish it in
Word for the Mac. It's just no problem. I get Word, PowerPoint, PDF and
Excel files as email attachments all the time, and they open equally
well on PCs and Macs.
By the way, in addition to Microsoft Office
files, and Adobe PDF files, many other common file types carry over
perfectly from the Windows platform to the Mac, and vice versa. These
include JPG picture files, MP3 music files, and HTML files created for
the Web. None need conversion or translation.
Are there any digital camera and VCR combination
cameras?
"Q&A," The Wall Street Journal, by Walter
Mossberg, May 5, 2005; Page B4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111525031544325273,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Q: I have a digital camera and a camcorder, but
hate to carry both on business trips, vacations or family visits, since
they require different chargers, extra batteries, different types of
memory cards, etc. I wondered if there was a combo digital camera that
could take both decent still pictures and long videos.
A: Actually, in the digital era, the consumer
still camera and video camera are slowly merging. Most digital still
cameras can take short movies, and some can take movies that last as
long as the capacity of their memory cards will allow. Also, a new class
of "tapeless" video cameras has emerged. These small models save their
videos to memory cards instead of tapes, and also function as digital
still cameras.
The best-known camera in this new combo
category is the Panasonic D-Snap. Sony makes one called the DSC-M1. But
the category isn't mature yet, and doesn't offer a complete balance
between the two modes. For instance, the Sony is really a still camera
with video capability, and lacks the complete set of features you might
want in a video camera. (Sony sells it as a still camera.) The Panasonic
is more of a video camera with still capability. Its still pictures are
only two megapixels in resolution.
So, you may still be stuck carrying two
cameras, unless you can content yourself with the simple videos
available on still cameras, or the limited still pictures available on
video cameras.
"In Defense of Cheating," by Donald A. Norman, UBIQUITY, vol. 6, issue
11, April 5-12, 2005 ---
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i11_norman.html
(Dr. Norman is a well-known computer scientist and author who often
challenges common thinking ---
http://www.jnd.org/ )
In a recent issue of Ubiquity, Evan Golub
examined the implications for cheating of allowing students to use
computers during examinations (Golub, E. (2005). PCs in the classroom &
open book exams. Ubiquity, 6(9).
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i9_golub.html
)
I was disturbed by Golub's article because the
emphasis was on cheating by students and possible counteractive
measures. Never did he ask the more fundamental questions: What is the
purpose of an examination; Why do students cheat? Instead, he proposed
that faculty become police enforcers, trying to weed out dishonest
behavior. I would prefer to turn faculty into educators and mentors,
guiding students to use all the resources at their disposal to solve
important problems.
Golub takes as a given our current educational
methods that test by requiring students to prove that they can
regurgitate the information presented in class without assistance from
others (although, thankfully, he does allow them to consult books,
reference notes, and even internet sources). But in real life, asking
others for help is not only permitted, it is encouraged. Why not rethink
the entire purpose of our examination system? We should be encouraging
students to learn how to use all possible resources to come up with
effective answers to important problems. Students should be encouraged
to ask others for help, and they should also be taught to give full
credit to those others. So, the purpose of this contribution to Ubiquity
is to offer an alternative approach: to examine the origins of cheating,
and by solving the root cause, to simultaneously reduce or eliminate
cheating while enhancing learning. (This essay is adapted from an
unpublished posting on my website: In defense of cheating,
www.jnd.org)
Continued in article
Bob Jensen's threads on cheating are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
The AICPA unveiled a Web
site for CPAs interested in information technology (
www.aicpa.org/infotech ). It offers resources
on system security and reliability; tools and checklists to help CPAs assess
organizational practices pertaining to information privacy, e-commerce and
similar subjects; and guidance on standards and regulations. In addition to
the resources available to all visitors, the site contains special content
accessible only by those CPAs who hold the Institute’s Certified Information
Technology Professional (CITP) credential or belong to the IT Membership
Section.
News Digest, Journal of Accountancy, May 2005, Page 14 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2005/news.htm#information
May 5, 2005 message from Carolyn Kotlas
[kotlas@email.unc.edu]
TEACHING, TEACHING TECHNOLOGIES, AND VIEWS
OF KNOWLEDGE
In "Teaching as Performance in the Electronic
Classroom" (FIRST MONDAY, vol. 10, no. 4, April 2005), Doug Brent,
professor in the Faculty of Communication and Culture at the University
of Calgary, presents two views of teaching: teaching as a "performance"
and teaching as a transfer of knowledge through text, a "thing." He
discusses the social groups that have stakes in each view and how
teaching will be affected by the view and group that gains primacy. "If
the group that values teaching as performance has the most influence, we
will put more energy into developing flexible courseware that promotes
social engagement and interaction. . . . If the group that sees teaching
as textual [i.e., a thing] has the most influence, we will develop more
elaborate technologies for delivering courses as online texts,
emphasising the role of the student as audience rather than as
participant." Brent's paper is available online at
http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue10_4/brent/index.html .
First Monday [ISSN 1396-0466] is an online,
peer-reviewed journal whose aim is to publish original articles about
the Internet and the global information infrastructure. It is published
in cooperation with the University Library, University of Illinois at
Chicago. For more information, contact: First Monday, c/o Edward
Valauskas, Chief Editor, PO Box 87636, Chicago IL 60680-0636 USA; email:
ejv@uic.edu; Web: http://firstmonday.dk/.
LAPTOPS IN THE CLASSROOM
The theme for the latest issue of NEW
DIRECTIONS FOR TEACHING AND LEARNING (vol. 2005, issue 101, Spring 2005)
is "Enhancing Learning with Laptops in the Classroom." Centered on the
faculty development program at Clemson University, the issue's purpose
is "to show that university instructors can and do make pedagogically
productive and novel use of laptops in the classroom" and "to advise
institutional leaders on how to make a laptop mandate successful at
their university." The publication is available online
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/86011233 .
New Directions for Teaching and Learning [ISSN:
0271-0633], a quarterly journal published by Wiley InterScience, offers
a "comprehensive range of ideas and techniques for improving college
teaching based on the experience of seasoned instructors and on the
latest findings of educational and psychological researchers." The
journal is available both in print and online formats.
NEW E-JOURNAL ON LEARNING AND EVALUATION
STUDIES IN LEARNING, EVALUATION, INNOVATION AND
DEVELOPMENT is a new peer-reviewed electronic journal that "supports
emerging scholars and the development of evidence-based practice and
that publishes research and scholarship about teaching and learning in
formal, semi-formal and informal educational settings and sites." Papers
in the current issue include:
"Can Students Improve Performance by Clicking
More? Engaging Students Through Online Delivery" by Jenny Kofoed
"Managing Learner Interactivity: A Precursor to
Knowledge Exchange" by Ken Purnell, Jim Callan, Greg Whymark and Anna
Gralton
"Online Learning Predicates Teamwork:
Collaboration Underscores Student Engagement" by Greg Whymark, Jim
Callan and Ken Purnell
Studies in Learning, Evaluation, Innovation and
Development [ISSN 1832-2050] will be published at least once a year by
the LEID (Learning, Evaluation, Innovation and Development) Centre,
Division of Teaching and Learning Services, Central Queensland
University, Rockhampton, Queensland 4702 Australia. For more information
contact: Patrick Danaher, tel: +61-7-49306417; email: p.danaher@cqu.edu.au.
Current and back issues are available at
http://www.sleid.cqu.edu.au/index.php .
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
NEW WEBLOG ON SCHOLARLY ELECTRONIC
PUBLISHING
Charles W. Bailey, Jr., compiler of SCHOLARLY
ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING BIBLIOGRAPHY (now in its 57th edition), has a new
publication. DigitalKoans is a weblog that provides commentary on
scholarly electronic publishing and digital culture issues. It is
available at
http://www.escholarlypub.com/digitalkoans/
.
Since 2001, Bailey has also published another
weblog, The Scholarly Electronic Weblog, an exhaustive compilation of
citations to articles dealing with all aspects of scholarly
communication. The weblog is online at
http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepw.htm .
Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography is
a searchable resource that cites selected articles, books, electronic
documents, and other sources that are useful in understanding scholarly
electronic publishing efforts on the Internet and other networks. The
latest version is available at
http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepb.html .
Bailey is the Assistant Dean for Digital
Library Planning and Development at the University of Houston Libraries.
In 1989, Bailey established PACS-L, a mailing list about public-access
computers in libraries, and The Public-Access Computer Systems Review,
one of the first scholarly electronic journals published on the
Internet. For more information, contact Charles W. Bailey, Jr.,
University of Houston, Library Administration, 114 University Libraries,
Houston, TX 77204-2000 USA; tel: 713-743-9804; fax: 713-743-9811; email:
cbailey@uh.edu; Web:
http://info.lib.uh.edu/cwb/bailey.htm
.
Bob Jensen's threads on searching for electronic publications are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm
Life in the Fast Lane of Auditing
"Take This Job and ... File It: Burdened by
Extra Work Created By the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, CPAs Leave the Big Four for
Better Life," by Diya Gullapalli, The Wall Street Journal, May 4,
2005; Page C1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111517138376224101,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
The Big Four accounting firms also face extra
work created by the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley securities-overhaul act, passed
in the wake of the blowups at Enron Corp. and WorldCom (now MCI Inc.).
At the same time, the pressure to get the job done right also comes from
within: Faced with mounting litigation from the accounting debacles of
earlier this decade, the Big Four can't afford many more mistakes.
Junior auditors, with three to five years'
experience, long have done much of the grunt work in auditing publicly
traded companies. They have always had the highest turnover at
accounting firms -- as many as one in four quits annually at
PricewaterhouseCoopers, according to a recent study it commissioned.
Overall, nearly one in five accountants at large CPA firms left in 2003,
up from 17% in 2002, according to the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants. The AICPA expects that trend to continue this year.
To combat the problem, the Big Four are trying
to move from a culture of overloading and underpaying youngsters to
nurturing and better rewarding them.
They are hiring larger numbers of them, and
offering bigger bonuses, more vacation and special referral fees. Ernst
& Young LLP has started a concierge service to make restaurant
reservations and pick up dry cleaning. Deloitte & Touche LLP holds "town
hall meetings" to let junior employees vent gripes to senior partners.
The big firms are more aggressive in dropping or turning down business,
to hold down the workload, and they are pulling older staff from other
departments, like tax-services, to help out.
"The profession has recognized that we have a
lot of stress in the system, and we're doing a lot of things to execute
against that," says Bob Moritz, a senior partner at
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
"Does this model still work?" asks Jim Walsh, a
human-resources managing director for the firm. "It's a good question"
that is under review there.
"African American Students and the CPA Exam," by Quinton Booker,
Journal of Accountancy, May 2005 ---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2005/booker.htm
DESPITE DECADES OF EFFORT
by organizations such as the AICPA
and NASBA to bring more minority
candidates into the profession, the
numbers are still small. Still,
there were 5,731 African American
candidates for the CPA exam in
2002—the largest for any year since
1997.
THE DATA SUGGEST A SEVERE
SHORTAGE of African
American males under age 25 holding
graduate degrees.
SINCE MANY STUDENTS DECIDE
TO major in accounting as
early as high school, employers
should begin to build relationships
with high school juniors and seniors
through summer job opportunities.
THE VAST MAJORITY OF
CANDIDATES are concentrated
in 10 states. Employers in other
states need to be more creative in
finding and hiring CPAs.
PROGRESS IS BEING MADE.
Much of the success can
likely be attributed to mentoring,
internship and co-op programs, and
scholarship programs at the
undergraduate, master’s and doctoral
levels. |
|
|
I should mention the tremendous effort the KPMG Foundation has made to
attract African Americans into accountancy doctoral programs in leading
universities ---
http://www.kpmgfoundation.org/foundinit.asp
Minority Accounting
Doctoral Scholarships
Financial support often determines whether a motivated
student can meet the escalating costs of higher
education. KPMG Foundation's accounting doctoral
scholarships for minorities aim to further increase the
completion rate among African-American,
Hispanic-American, and Native American doctoral
students.
For the 2003-2004 academic
year, the Foundation awarded 14 scholarships, $10,000
each renewable for a total of five years, to minority
accounting doctoral students. Another 53 accounting or
information systems doctoral students had their
scholarships renewed for 2003-2004, bringing the total
number of scholarships awarded for the 2003-2004
academic year to 67.
The 2004-2005 scholarship
recipients were announced in June 2004.
Click here
for a complete list of recipients.
With our total commitment to
date exceeding $6 million, this scholarship program is
helping bring scholars' dreams to fruition. Every
scholarship means a new professor, which ultimately
benefits that professor's tens of thousands of students.
For more information, visit
http://accounting.rutgers.edu/kpmg/funding.html. |
|
May 6, 2005 reply from Saeed Roohani
[sroohani@COX.NET]
Bob,
Quinton Booker is one of few African American Ph.D. in Accounting, and
he is very active in the AICPA and other accounting organizations. His
findings in this article are very important to accounting program
administrators.
At Bryant, we have created Accounting Careers
Leadership Institute funded by PricewaterhouseCoopers and AICPA that
host African American and Latino high school students one week on
campus, starting Summer 05, http://web.bryant.edu/pwcacli We have
sessions and activities that introduce these kids to the accounting
profession and careers. Also, I am open for any idea and/or suggestion
from this list.
We set high standards in the the application
form, and it was advertised basically in the Northeast region. I am
happy to say that we have received about 160 good applications for 30
slots we have. I wish we could take all 160 applicants.
Saeed
Bob Jensen's threads on accountancy careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
May 3 message from XXXXX
Hi Bob,
Next month at the YYYYY national conference, I
will be giving a presentation titled “ZZZZZ”. I intend to cover
presentation techniques regarding organization, message and visual
presentation. I would also like to include a segment on adding
multi-media to selected presentations. Could you point me to resources I
could use to round out the two hour hands-on session?
Thanks,
XXXXX
May 4, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
I would start with Camtasia and other ways of inserting video modules
into presentations. The advantage of video modules is that when you make
your presentation files available after the conference, the users get
audio as well as video explanations on how to do certain things. I like
Camtasia because you can learn it in less than an hour, and it’s really
easy to use. I suggest compressing the video files into wmf formats so
they will play on Windows Media Player.
For example, suppose you want to demonstrate how to navigate one or
more Websites. You can turn Camtasia on and record your every move in a
Website while you narrate what you are doing. Every screen will be
captured in video (including the pictures). And during the conference
your computer does not even have to be connected to the Internet to
demonstrate navigation of the Internet or a particular Website.
You can see some of my Camtasia tutorials at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
I suggest you look at some of the videos with wmf file extensions.
See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Especially note the variable speed playback technology used at BYU ---
http://www.enounce.com/docs/BYUPaper020319.pdf
You might also note some of the advanced things you can do in
PowerPoint including Flash-type animations.
You might present some of the dark side warnings at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
My main overview documents on technology in education are linked at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
I have some pages that may be a bit overwhelming.
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/thetools.htm
And some old but good advice at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245ch02.htm
Hope this helps.
Bob Jensen
From the T.H.E. Newsletter on May 4, 2005
CrystalGraphics Inc., a
developer and publisher of add-on products for Microsoft Office, has
released PowerPlugs: Video Backgrounds Player and PowerPlugs: Video
Backgrounds Content . The Video Backgrounds Player is a unique software
product that plugs directly into Microsoft PowerPoint allowing users to
select and insert full-screen moving backgrounds into their
presentations quickly and effortlessly. It is also compatible with all
of PowerPoint's animation tools and text-editing capabilities. Video
Backgrounds Content is the perfect complement to the Video Backgrounds
Player software. It features nine volumes that each include 25 unique
background video clips optimized for use with PowerPoint so they can
play back smoothly in real time on most Pentium III or higher PCs. The
footage is royalty free, so you can use it as many times as you like in
your presentations with no added cost.
For more, visit
http://www.crystalgraphics.com
Bob Jensen's threads on resources are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources
A New Photoshop Makes Retouching Reality
(Somewhat) Easier
Adobe Photoshop, of course, is the world's most
popular photo-editing software (for Mac and Windows). Every time a magazine
pastes a movie star's head onto a different body for its cover, you can bet
that Photoshop was involved. Such digital manipulation is so common that
"Photoshop" has become a verb: "My ex-husband was on that trip, too, but
I've Photoshopped him out of this shot." But even when no movie stars are
decapitated, Photoshop's magic is at work all around you. Photoshop
color-corrects, brightens, darkens, crops, sharpens or airbrushes
imperfections from a huge percentage of the photographs you see every day,
whether in ads, articles, movies or CD's, on Web sites or the covers of
books. No wonder, then, that when Adobe releases a new version, as it did
last week, photographers and designers sit up and take notice.
David Pogue, "A New Photoshop Makes Retouching Reality (Somewhat) Easier,"
The New York Times, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/05/technology/circuits/05pogue.html?
Update on XBRL
May 1, 2005 message from Glen Gray
[glen.gray@CSUN.EDU]
I attended the 11th Annual XBRL International
Conference in Boston last week. The thing that impressed me the most was
the status of the growing population of XBRL tools. I would characterize
them as being at the FrontPage 1.0 level—and I mean that as a
compliment. In other words, the programs are easier to use, are more
intuitive, and are less likely to crash than earlier versions. In
particular, I would say these programs are definitely classroom ready.
That is, if you want to give students a flavor of XBRL activities, some
of these tools could be (relatively) easily adopted for the classroom.
Most are available for free downloads for 30-day trial periods.
For a portal to various products, you can start
at
http://www.xbrl.org/ProductsandServices/ .
These tools address different aspects of XBRL. Some create instance (XBRL)
documents, some create taxonomies, some validate XBRL documents, and
some render XBRL documents (convert a XBRL document to human-readable
form). Many of these tools do more than one of these functions, but some
focus on specific functions more than the others.
A good place to start in the classroom is for
students to create an XBRL instance document. That is, start with a set
of financial statements and create an XBRL file from those statements. I
have not personally tested all of these tools, so I’m definitely not an
expert on which are the best tools, but I found a good place to start is
Dragon Tag 1.5 from Rivet Software (
http://www.rivetsoftware.com/ ). If you go to
the Rivet site, first click on Products in the menu on the left, and
then click on the term “Product Download” at the top of the Products
page—not “Click Here” button. Make sure you are downloading version 1.5
(not version 1.0). The “Click Here” button takes you to version 1.0.
Dragon Tag is an add-on to Excel. To convert a
financial statement to XBRL, you first load the financial statements
into Excel, then you open the Dragon Tag pane, and then you drag the
appropriate tags from the pane to the applicable cells in Excel.
[Full disclosure: I’ve known Rob Blake, one of
the founders of Rivet Software, for many years when he was at FRx and
Microsoft, but it was actually a demo of Dragon Tag by someone not with
Rivet Software that encouraged me to download the software. I’ll let
Neal and others recommend the other XBRL tools that they are more
familiar with than I am.]
Glen L. Gray, PhD, CPA
Dept. of Accounting & Information Systems
College of Business & Economics
California State University, Northridge
Northridge, CA 91330-8372
http://www.csun.edu/~vcact00f
May 3, 2005 reply from Roger Debreceny
[roger@DEBRECENY.COM]
Many of the presentations from the 11th XBRL
International Conference in Boston, Massachusetts have been uploaded to the
XII website at
http://www.xbrl.org/PastEvents/
A great RSS feed on XBRL is at
http://www.xbrlspy.com/
Microsoft has a Solution Showcase and Video at
http://www.microsoft.com/office/showcase/xbrl/default.mspx
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
May 5, 2005 message from Corku Mortoo
corku@softkraft.gh
Dear Mr. Jensen,
I am researching XBRL with tha view of introducing the idea to
Ghanaian firms and if possible start a XBRL Ghana Chapter.
I just finished watching your video on XBRL and enjoyed it. However I
would like to try my hands on the Demo and can't seem to find it on the
web. Could you please send me a copy or point me to a link where I can
download it? Also the Microsoft Office Tools for XBRL prototype seems to
have been removed from the web. If you have a copy I will dearly like a
copy.
I look forward to hearing from you.
Thanks
Corku Mortoo
May 6, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Corku,
I assume that you are referring to my
XBRLdemos.wmv video at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/Tutorials/
I think the software used in his PwC/Microsoft demo has been taken off
the Web in anticipation of new and better things. My video does,
however, show how this software worked when it was available on the
Web.
I'm afraid that is all I can offer in the way of
a demo at the moment. I'm really not an expert using the latest XBRL
software.
I will forward your message to my friends who
are specializing in XBRL and hope that some of them will help you more
than I can help you at the moment.
My threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
Bob Jensen
May 6, 2005 reply from neal hannon
[nhannon@COX.NET]
One of the best sources of XBRL product demos
is the video archive from XBRL-US meeting, held in Raleigh, NC in
January 2005. The link to the video is here:
http://www.xbrl.org/us/secvfp . The video
contains over 5 hours of material detailing how to use most of today's
best XBRL software tools. The demonstrations are conducted by XBRL-US
members and are geared to provide guidance to companies seeking to
participate in the SEC's XBRL Voluntary Filing Program.
Neal
Neal J. Hannon, CMA
University of Hartford;
Barney School of Business
XBRL Editor, Strategic Finance Magazine Program
Chair, IMA national conference Las Vegas 2006
May 6, 2005 reply from Jim Richards
[J.Richards@MURDOCH.EDU.AU]
Hi Corku,
My understanding is that the Microsoft demo was
a proof of concept project and is based on the XBRL Specification 2.0.
The closest to that software now is Dragon Tag
from Rivet Software. It is based on the latest XBRL Specification (2.1)
but needs Office 2003 to work.
You can visit the Rivet web site (
http://www.rivetsoftware.com/ ) and download a
30-day trial version.
There is a difference in that Dragon Tag is for
tagging an Excel spreadsheet and creating an instance document whereas
the Microsoft product was more about analysing data.
If you check out the XBRL Showcase (on the XBRL
International web site
http://www.xbrl.org/showcase/ ) you may find
some demos from a couple of stock exchanges that have done pilot
projects and include an Excel spreadsheet that will connect to their
XBRL data.
Cheers.
Jim -------------------------------------------
Jim Richards
Murdoch Business School
Murdoch University
South Street
MURDOCH WA 6150 Phone: 61-8-9360-2706 Fax: 61-8-9310-5004
May 4, 2005 message from Jan Dash
[jdash9@comcast.net]
Hi Bob -
I would like to ask a big favor of you. On your
website
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#0000Begin
, you say:
I've spent a great deal of my summer and my
Fall 2004 Semester leave plowing through a book entitled
Quantitative Finance and Risk Managment: A Physicists Approach by
Jan W. Dash, by Jan W. Dash (World Scientific Publishing, 2004, ISBN
981-238-712-9) This is a great book by a good writer.
Would you mind if I quote you in a flyer that
World Scientific is distributing? I would appreciate your help very
much. I'm sure it would help the book become better known.
The exact quote for the flyer is:
Review
"This is a great book by a good writer."
-Robert E. Jensen, Professor of Business Administration, Trinity
University
Thanks in advance.
Best regards,
Jan Dash
May 5, 2005 message from PwC News
In 2005 we have hired over 3,100 students
for full-time positions across all of our lines of service. This
represents a 17% increase over 2004 and 68% over 2002. This year we will
also have over 2,000 interns. As accounting educators, PwC appreciates
the important role you play in providing this excellent talent to us.
PwC's 8th Annual Global CEO Survey is available
electronically through our website. We'd like to make this available to
you so that you may explore the contents of the Survey in an interactive
manner. Additionally, you may download a PDF copy of the Survey from the
website. We felt that the Survey could be useful for classroom
discussions ---
http://www.pwc.com/8thAnnualGlobalCEOSurvey/
World Watch Newsletter ---
http://www.pwc.com/worldwatchnewsletter2005/
There is growing recognition of the
importance of transparency and common business languages for
accounting and governance. This is particularly important in the
current business environment. Our most recent issue of World Watch
contains opinion articles, case studies and worldwide news on the
many initiatives to improve corporate reporting.
Overall Topics Discussed:
News on IRFS, audit, governance and sustainability
Governance
IRFS Hot Topics
Investors
Interviews
Assessing Awareness and Impact of Sarbanes Oxley Section 404 in the
Global Capital Markets ---
http://www.pwc.com/impactofsarbanesoxleyglobalcapitalmarkets/
Investors, the Stock Market, and Sarbanes-Oxley's New Section 404
Requirements ---
http://www.pwc.com/stanfordlawschoolnew404requirementsconference/
Five Tips for Saving Time and Pain With
Excel ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100854
Canadian Geographic Atlas Online ---
http://www.canadiangeographic.ca/atlas/intro.aspx?lang=En#
Exposure Draft from the FASB ---
http://www.fasb.org/draft/index.shtml
The Hierarchy of Generally Accepted
Accounting Principles (Proposed Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards)
April 28, 2005
(Comment period ends June 27, 2005)
[Download]
May 6, 2005 message from Dennis Beresford
[dberesfo@terry.uga.edu]
Bob,
I just finished listening to the GE web cast
and it is fascinating. It's interesting to listen to the company's
explanations of what happened and to the analysts' questions. The web
cast is available at:
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=118676&p=irol-eventdetails&EventId=1062945&WebCastId=443224&StreamId=533758
although these things usually get removed after a
month or so. They also said that they would post a transcript of the web
cast later today.
Denny
May 6, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Denny,
I enjoyed part of the Webcast and appreciated the fact that the
analysis of why GE is restating its financial statements came near the
beginning of the Webcast. I thought the explanation was direct and
very clear. The restatement tends to make a FAS 133 mountain out
of an economic mole hill.
Scholars interested in the Shortcut Method for Interest Rate Swaps
will find this GE Webcast interesting. FAS 133 makes a huge exception
for having to test for hedge effectiveness of interest rate swaps. This
is important, because typical tests of effectiveness such as the dollar
offset test will often fail quarter to quarter for such swaps. Not
having to test for effectiveness helps to avoid having to declare swap
hedges ineffective when, in my viewpoint, they are perfectly effective
over the life of the swap.
GE executives decided after the fact that they thought they were
eligible for the Short Cut Method on some swaps that technically
violated one SCM test. The impact is rather small and not a big deal
even though GE is going to restate its financial statements to the tune
of about $300 million.
The important point for academics and practitioners is to learn why
GE decided they did not meet the SCM tests outlined under "Short Cut
Method for Interest Rate Swaps" in my glossary at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#S-Terms
The important point for standard setters is to learn that this is yet
another technicality in an accounting rule that has absolutely no impact
on the actual economic performance or cash flows of a company. I think
standard setters have to become more creative in distinguishing
cash/economic outcomes versus fluctuations in financial performance that
are transitory and have no ultimate impact on cash/economic performance.
This earnings restatement by GE due to derivatives is much less
complex than the macro hedging complications of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm#FannieMae
Bob Jensen
May 6, 200r reply from Dennis Beresford
[DBeresfo@Terry.UGA.Edu]
Bob,
What I found most interesting in the web cast were
the comments by the CEO and CFO along the lines of "what we did back
then was considered okay, but now everyone expects us to actually follow
the specific rules." They cited materiality more than once - as long as
what we did wasn't "materially different" than what the rules required,
we and our auditors thought that was fine. In fairness to GE, SFAS 133
is incredibly complicated and they made clear in the web cast that it
wouldn't have been a problem to modify the derivatives in order to meet
the hedging rules if they thought that was necessary.
GE and many other companies are complaining
about applying today's thinking to yesterday's issues - I guess this is
what we usually call 20:20 hindsight. This is similar to the lease
restatement problem that has affected about 300 companies. What they
were doing didn't comport with GAAP but everybody was doing it so it was
considered "generally acceptable."
I wouldn't be surprised if a few other large
companies have to revise their accounting for derivatives, particularly
if they are looked at carefully by PCAOB reviewers or the SEC.
Denny
"GE Restates Several Years Of Earnings: Derivatives-Accounting Rule
Applied Improperly Resulted In Less-Volatile Quarters," by Kathryn Kranhold
and Deborah Solomon, The Wall Street Journal, May 9, 2005; Page A3
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111537976071026800,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
General Electric Co. said it restated its
earnings for the years 2001 through 2004 and the first quarter of 2005,
amid increasing scrutiny by regulators over how companies account for
derivative transactions used to hedge financial risks such as
interest-rate fluctuations.
GE, the largest U.S. company by market
capitalization, said Friday it restated its earnings after misapplying a
rule on how to account for certain derivative deals. The restatement had
minimal impact on GE's yearly profits, lifting its per-share earnings by
two cents in each of the past two years. Still, the revised figures show
the company's earnings would have been volatile in some quarters and
that GE would have missed analysts' estimates had the hedges been
accounted for properly.
On Friday as part of its restatement, GE
revealed that it had received a request from the Securities and Exchange
Commission in January for general information about its hedging
accounting. GE also is expected to face a formal inquiry, as federal
regulators seek to subpoena specific documents and interview witnesses.
Additionally, the SEC has requested information from GE's auditors, KPMG
LLP. A KPMG spokesman declined to comment. (See related article.)
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's tutorials on accounting for derivative financial
instruments are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
From the T.H.E. Newsletter on May 4, 2005
Avaya and the University of Maryland's Robert
H. Smith School of Business has announced an expansion of their research
and development relationship with a new “virtual community” project and
the extension of existing work in communications, enabling supply chains
and executive mobility into new scenarios and applications.
Avaya and the Smith School will develop a
virtual community prototype based on Avaya's IP telephony solutions for
mobility and collaboration. The virtual community will be designed to
encourage greater engagement of part-time and remote campus students,
more efficient and effective access to and collaboration among all
students, faculty and staff, plus provide alumni with an ongoing,
university-branded value. As a first step in the prototype, virtual
community participants will have access to the Avaya Unified
Communications Center, which provides a unified messaging mailbox with
speech access capabilities to IBM Lotus Notes. Participants would be
able to choose a voice interface, Web access or touchtone commands to
interact with calendars, tasks, voicemail, e-mail and faxes, plus
schedule meetings and launch conference calls with other participants.
For the full story, visit
http://www.avaya.com/gcm/master-usa/en-us/corporate/pressroom/pressreleases/2005/pr-050426.htm
May 1, 2005 message from All Archaeology
[info@allarchaeology.com]
I took a look at your site a couple of hours
ago... and I want to tell you that I'd really love to trade links with
you. I think your site has some really good stuff related to my site's
topic of archaeology and would be a great resource for my visitors as it
deals with some great aspects of archaeology that I'd like to give my
visitors more information about.
In fact, I went ahead and added your site to my
All Archaeology Resource Directory at
http://www.allarchaeology.com/archaeologyinternship
Is that OK with you?
Can I ask a favor? Will you give me a link back on your site? I'd
really appreciate you returning the favor.
Thanks and feel free to drop me an email if you'd like to chat more
about this.
Best wishes,
Adam
http://www.allarchaeology.com
info@allarchaeology.com
Dinosaur links from the May 5 Scout Report
Important new dinosaur located in Utah Dinosaur
‘Missing Link’ Found in Utah
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050401397.html
“Bizarre” New Dinosaur Shows Evolution to Plant
Eating, Study Says
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/05/0504_050504_utah_dino.html
Dinosaur embraced vegetarianism
http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050502/full/050502-3.html
Walking with Dinosaurs
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dinosaurs/index.shtml
Dinosaurs: Facts and Fiction
http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dinosaurs/
Paul Sereno: Paleontologist [pdf]
http://www.paulsereno.org/
"Companies Offer Tech Solutions For Complex Finance Problems ,"
AccountingWEB, May 9, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100875
Software makers are coming up with new ways for
companies to manage vast amounts of financial data. From the
complexities of complying with the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform law
to the everyday tasks involved with financial reporting, new products
are being offered to help companies do the work more efficiently.
Here is a sampling:
Applix, Inc. – The software maker announced
Tuesday that it has upgraded its TM1 suite so that users can do more
sophisticated financial reporting and consolidations. Wizards have been
added so that financial data can be imported more quickly from general
ledger, accounting and legacy systems into Business Performance
Management applications.
A new offering is TM1 Financial Consolidations,
which supports journal entries, inter-company eliminations and other
activities specific to the consolidation process.
“Good financial planning begins with the
actuals, is followed by a planning process and ends with a comparison of
the subsequent actual results to the plan,” said David Menninger, Applix
vice president, worldwide marketing and product management, in a
statement. “The ability to access information from multiple sources,
present it in an easy-to-use, familiar environment and act upon it for
everything from reporting to planning to forecasting enables companies
to reduce cycle times, increase competitiveness and have greater trust
in the information.”
The improvements are available for beta use
now. Contact Brian Barnes at bbarnes@applix.com
Movaris - The company, which provides Financial
Control Management software, has developed Certainty 8.1 to allow
companies to manage reorganizations, mergers and acquisitions, and
personnel changes as they affect the financial control environment.
Certainty 8.1 can change the users who are
assigned to hundreds of financial control tests, which improves
corporate security. It can update multiple financial control attributes.
It allows for comparisons of control activities at different points in
time. “With visibility into changes in the control environment over
time, managers identify improvements and the impact of change on their
business unit, and auditors identify the controls in place at the time
an issue or exception occurred,” the company said.
Stan Tims, vice president of marketing and
business development at Movaris, said in a statement that companies will
need to consolidate time-consuming tasks to comply with Sarbanes-Oxley
in a cost-effective way.
"Key technologies can reduce the cost of SOX
compliance upwards of 25 percent, as compliance has been a mostly
manual, people-intensive process. Most companies cannot (and should not)
maintain this level of manpower, though the need for compliance will not
shrink," said John Hagerty, analyst for AMR Research in a January 2005
report, SOX Decisions for 2005: Step Up Technology Investments.
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's threads on accounting software are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#AccountingSoftware
"Report Finds TIAA-CREF Missteps in Auditor
Controversy," by Doug Lederman, Inside Higher Ed, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/06/tiaa
TIAA-CREF’s leaders made “substantial missteps”
in managing conflict of interest charges involving the relationship
between some of its trustees and its external auditor (Ernst &
Young) last year, but the company showed no bad
faith and ultimately handled the situation correctly, a high-profile
investigator hired by the company concluded Thursday.
In a report published on the pension giant’s
Web site, Nicholas deB. Katzenbach, former U.S. attorney general, also
blamed the problems on the company’s governance structure, which places
a board of overseers over separate boards of directors for TIAA and CREF.
The arrangement creates the “constant risk of potential and actual
conflict,” the report said.
The report also states clearly that the
conflict controversy did not “touch on the quality of TIAA-CREF’s
management of investor funds, or the integrity of the financial
statements it prepared.”
Two trustees — Stephen A. Ross of CREF and
William H. Waltrip of TIAA — resigned last November after revelations
that they had had a joint venture with Ernst & Young, the company’s
auditor, a situation that violated the Securities and Exchange
Commission’s rules on independent auditors.
Katzenbach’s 53-page report notes that
TIAA-CREF officials, upon learning informally of the trustees’
relationship with the auditor, underestimated the gravity of the problem
and failed to investigate the matter sufficiently.
“In sum, TIAA-CREF did not appreciate the
seriousness of the independence issue. While its personnel recognized
that there was a theoretical possibility of drastic consequences, they
saw it as a technical violation that would almost certainly be resolved
promptly and without difficulty,” Katzenbach wrote.
Continued in article
To download the report, go to
http://www.tiaa-cref.org/pdf/katzenbach_report_4_29_05.pdf
For more on Ernst & Young's loss of this audit due
to SEC actions at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Quotations and Tidbits
Music: Cast Your Fate to the
Wind (turn your speakers up) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/wind.htm
Last Week’s English Department
Meeting ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/27/galef4
This site has some great
multimedia programming:
Dancing Bush: Forget the politics, just
have some fun ---
http://www.starterupsteve.com/swf/dancingbush.html
(Don't forget to click the Music button)
Do you want to find out the age of a
friend or colleague? You want to quickly find out that person's phone
number, satellite photo of her/his house, map, and some other personal
information go to
http://www.zabasearch.com/
Yes Grandma Dunbar, I learned when you were born (you're really not a very
old granny). I also found that you are in the database both for Connecticut
and for your old address in Iowa City.
I also found other women named Amy Dunbar
around the country. If you want to assume some other Amy Dunbar’s identity,
it’s pretty easy to find what to claim as your new address and phone number
without having to change your name. With a little effort you might even to
be able to charge some other Amy Dunbar with some of your purchases.
You might have to pay extra for an
unlisted phone number.
That's Zaba as in
ZabaSearch.com, a so-called people search site that allows you to quickly
track down the whereabouts of just about anyone, free of charge. There are
already numerous people search resources online, varying widely in
reliability and fees. (There's also an interesting story about the people
behind ZabaSearch and the notorious mass suicide in Southern California
involving the Heaven's Gate cult. But we'll get back to that.) What makes
ZabaSearch great is that, at no cost, it quickly and comprehensively places
a remarkable amount of data about people right at your fingertips. What
makes ZabaSearch frightening is that, at no cost, it quickly and
comprehensively places a remarkable amount of data about people right at
your fingertips. "It's extremely troubling," said Gail Hillebrand, a staff
attorney with Consumers Union in San Francisco.
David Lazarus, "It's impressive, scary to see what a Zaba search can do ,"
San Francisco Chronicle, April 15, 2005 ---
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/04/15/BUG3JC8U341.DTL
"Pick your battles with Internet privacy,"
by Tom Merritt, c|net, April 26, 2005 ---
http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-3000_7-6213271-1.html?tag=nl.e501
ZabaSearch is not the
risk you're looking for Having your address out in the world doesn't
immediately mean the men in the black helicopters will land on your roof
tomorrow. But neither does not having your address listed in ZabaSearch
mean you're protected from all the crazies. We humans tend to overlook
real safety risks in favor of the more shocking ones--hence the
popularity of Fox TV.
If you really want
ZabaSearch to exclude you, the company provides an e-mail address where
you can request to be removed. Ironically, though, you need to provide a
lot of private information in order to be removed, which seems sort of
shady. The site staff did not respond to my attempt to contact them to
discuss that. However, it's understandable that you'd need some
verification from someone before you remove their private information
from public view. Otherwise you might violate an individual's right to
publicity.
If you really want to
expunge your address and phone number from the Web, though, you need to
go to the sources. Many, many places have your information and make it
available to the public for free or even for a small charge.
Do a quick search on
Google, and you'll find a few million directories for finding people.
Many of these draw from the same database, and often it's the public
telephone directory. If you want out, call your local phone company and
make sure you're unlisted in all directories, for both phone number and
address. You might have to change your number, though, since those older
records will keep showing up.
You also need to be
careful when you fill out forms--both governmental and otherwise. If
there's a privacy box and you didn't check it, your information may go
public. Did you allow the post office to alert people to your change of
address? Then don't be surprised to find your address in a public
database. There are also public records, such as property records, that
are public and will stay public.
The real breaches you
never think of But while you're trying to track down every scrap of info
on yourself and wipe it from the public eye, keep a few of these
situations in mind. Do you ever give out your address or credit card
number over the phone? How about in restaurants? Do you ever give your
credit card to a stranger who then disappears into a back room for
several minutes, totally unobserved by you? Is that safe?
What about contests?
Ever enter one at your local grocery store or mall? Have you ever given
out your phone number out loud walking down the street while talking on
a cell phone?
The list could go on,
but you get the picture. Somehow, when computers and the Internet are
involved, the dangers become magically bigger and more evil. Not that
you shouldn't take absolute care on the Web, especially with your
financial info; you should. But a search engine with public records is
hardly the huge monster it's been portrayed to be. It's not even the top
priority for fighting identity theft. If you want to know the nuts and
bolts of identity theft and what's being done about it, read Rob
Vamosi's Security Watch.
Don't help the hype This
brings me back to the frantic e-mail messages I got this week.
ZabaSearch expertly played on the overreaction people have to Internet
privacy concerns. A little-known start-up with no business base suddenly
has nationwide name recognition and a chance to make some money when it
starts charging for the information it found free elsewhere.
There's no fault in
that. Good for them. But maybe the next time you're about to light your
hair on fire over privacy, think about whether you're raising the alarm
or helping with marketing. Maybe put it to the waiter test. Is it
riskier than eating out? If not, just step away from the keyboard. It's
going to be OK.
May 2, 2005 reply from Jim McKinney
[jim@MCKINNEYCPA.COM]
I find this
databases very scary and dangerous. My wife holds a governmental
position that can expose our family to physical threats from criminals
and terrorists. Our phone number has been
unlisted for over ten years as a result.
Yet anyone, including bad guys, can look her address up and
find our phone number.
In addition what purpose other than identity theft does it help to know
the month of birth? I routinely give the wrong birth month and year now
days. This is a case where the government needs to step in.
Do you have questions about Medicare?
You can ask your questions live on Tuesday, May 3, 2005 at
http://my.webmd.com/content/chat_schedules/5/107561.htm?z=1727_00000_2002_hv_06
Free assessment on weight loss ---
https://diet.webmd.com/webmddiet/default_main.aspx?referrer=1111_006_0000_0013&secure=1
Or you can submit your health questions
to
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7640113/site/newsweek/
A guide to some of the newest medical
research and recommendations ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7639798/site/newsweek/
Health & Medicine From US News ---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/home.htm
Health & Medicine
The world of Chef Jorge
The daunting task of making New York City's school
lunches healthful and appealing
|
|
|
Neural Net Predictions of Execution:
Alas! If only investment forecasting could be so simple and accurate
What the software - known as an artificial neural
network - managed to do was to predict with more than 90 percent accuracy
who would be executed. The implication, says Dee Wood Harper, one of the
researchers and a professor of criminal justice at Loyola University in New
Orleans, is that "if this mindless software can determine who is going to
die and who is not going to die, then there's some arbitrariness here in the
[United States justice] system." The neural network, which learns by
constantly scanning the data for patterns, was given 1,000 cases from 1973
to 2000 where the outcome was known. Once trained on that information, it
was fed another 300 cases but without the outcome included. That's when its
prediction proved highly accurate. What some observers find alarming about
the outcome is that the 19 points of data supplied on each death-row inmate
contained no details of the case. Only facts such as age, race, sex, and
marital status were included, along with the date and type of offense.
Susan Llewelyn Leach, "Using software to model death row outcomes," The
Christian Science Monitor, April 27, 2005 ---
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0427/p17s01-usju.html
Lousy Chardonnay: Might as well be
Ripple
But year after year, we have raised our alarms
about inexpensive Chardonnay at a higher and higher pitch. After a tasting
in 2000, we warned that Chardonnay was becoming predictable, boring and
often unpleasant. "A lot of people are paying good money for bad wine," we
wrote then. Trying again a year later, we were even more concerned. After
some quick calculations, we wrote, only half-jokingly, "Americans wasted
$1.58 billion on substandard Chardonnay last year." Earlier this year, we
conducted a tasting of inexpensive Australian Chardonnay and were
disappointed by what we found. Is America doing better?
"When Cheap Chardonnay Is No Bargain: In Under-$20 U.S. Versions, Too Much
Oak, Few Gems; The 'Antique-Store' Odor," The Wall Street Journal,
April 29, 2005; Page W8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111472887708220142,00.html?mod=todays_us_weekend_journal
Alleged Errors of Evolutionary Psychology
But as Prof. Buller, a professor of philosophy at
Northern Illinois University, dug deeper, he concluded that the claims of
evo psych are "wrong in almost every detail" because the data underlying
them are deeply flawed. His book "Adapting Minds," from MIT Press, is the
most persuasive critique of evo psych I have encountered. Take the
stepfather claim. The evolutionary reasoning is this: A Stone Age man who
focused his care and support on his biological children, rather than kids
his mate had from an earlier liaison, would do better by evolution's
scorecard (how many descendants he left) than a man who cared for his
stepchildren. With this mindset, a stepfather is far more likely to abuse
his stepchildren. One textbook asserts that kids living with a parent and a
stepparent are some 40 times as likely to be abused as those living with
biological parents. But that's not what the data say, Prof. Buller finds.
First, reports that a child living in a family with a stepfather was abused
rarely say who the abuser was. Some children are abused by their biological
mother, so blaming all stepchild abuse on the stepfather distorts reality.
Also, a child's bruises or broken bones are more likely to be called abuse
when a stepfather is in the home, and more likely to be called accidental
when a biological father is, so data showing a higher incidence of abuse in
homes with a stepfather are again biased. "There is no substantial
difference between the rates of severe violence committed by genetic parents
and by stepparents," Prof. Buller concludes.
Sharon Begley, "Evolutionary Psych May Not Help Explain Our Behavior After
All," The Wall Street Journal, April 29, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111472626574220079,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Moving Ahead at Grinnell: Liberal arts colleges are
engaging in soul searching
In the ever competitive world of
higher education, liberal arts colleges have plenty of
burdens. They compete with top universities for the best
students and faculty members, but lack the research grants
or graduate students that help many a university keep things
running. In this environment, a number of liberal arts
colleges are engaging in soul searching. Being places that
value thoughtful (and sometimes prolonged) discussion, the
process isn’t speedy. Grinnell College — a leading liberal
arts institution — ended such a process this weekend when
its Board of Trustees signed off on a
strategic plan
that took three years and numerous committees to develop.
Last month, the faculty of the Iowa institution approved the
plan.The plan combines some ambitious plans to promote the
values of liberal arts (these parts of the plan were
developed by and are popular with professors) and some
ambitious plans to protect the college’s endowment (these
parts of the plan are tolerated by professors — or at least
by most of them).Among the features are a plan to create an
annual retreat for sophomores to focus on the liberal arts,
the hiring of faculty members to promote interdisciplinary
work, and an effort to rely less on the endowment and merit
aid — while growing slightly in size from 1,400 to 1,500
undergraduates.
Scott Jaschik, "Moving Ahead at Grinnell," Inside Higher
Ed, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/02/grinnell
Mum's the word says Auburn University's
President
Many college presidents consider reporters a
necessary nuisance in a democracy. Auburn University’s interim president, Ed
Richardson, isn’t so sure about the necessary part. He sent a memo to Auburn
faculty members and administrators last week telling them that he will no
longer speak with Jack Stripling, who covers higher education for the local
newspaper, The Opelika-Auburn News. “I acknowledge that the News’ coverage
of Auburn has included positive stories about students, research and events.
In my view though, the News has pitted our constituencies against one
another in print and has been especially dismissive of positive steps this
university has taken with regard to its governing board,” Richardson wrote
in the memo. “I have been dealing with journalists for decades,” Richardson
continued. “While I expect skepticism and hard questions from reporters, I
also expect fairness and responsibility. I have not seen that fairness in
the News’ coverage of Auburn governance.”
Scott Jaschik, "Auburn President’s Permanent No Comment," Inside Higher
Ed, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/02/auburn
Anti-Military Occupation at U. of Hawaii
About 50 student protesters have
been occupying the president’s office at the University of
Hawaii since Thursday, demanding that the interim president
call off plans for a new research center affiliated with the
Navy. The
protesters
(whose activities are visible on a
Web cam)
object to the center because some
of the research that would take place there would be
classified. University officials, after first saying that
the protesters could stay, have now threatened to have them
arrested, possibly as early as today, if they do not leave.
Scott Jaschik, "Anti-Military Occupation at U. of Hawaii,"
Inside Higher Ed, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/02/hawaii
Teenage girls like to blog provocatively
Soon after, Marcy went to the middle school and
talked with its technology coordinator, Mary Ellen Handy, who volunteers
with WiredSafety.org. Handy discovered that about one-third of her 250
students have Internet blogs -- and only about 5 percent of the parents know
about it. "The girls are all made up to look seductive....Parents have no
clue this is going on," she said. "You think your kid is safe because they
are in your house in their own bedroom. Who can hurt them when you are
guarding the front door? But (the Internet) is a bigger opening than the
front door."
Bob Sullivan, "Kids, blogs and too much information Children reveal more
online than parents know," MSNBC, April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7668788/
Ministers should learn that it is much
more acceptable if attribution of source material is given up front
Glenn Wagner was a successful mega-church pastor in
Charlotte, N.C., until one of his elders heard a sermon on the radio that
was identical to one he had heard from the pulpit. Mr. Wagner confessed that
he had been preaching other people's sermons off and on for two years,
including some he broadcast on Christian radio. He resigned from his
ministry last fall. A similar case occurred after members of the National
City Christian Church in Washington, D.C., found on the internet sermons
that Alvin O'Neal, moderator of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
and a celebrated preacher in that denomination, had preached. Mr. O'Neal
apologized for his actions and remains in his ministry. A number of
lesser-known ministers across the country have also been caught stealing
sermons. Sometimes it makes the newspapers, but other times congregations or
denominations handle the matter quietly.
Gene Edward Veith, "Word for word RELIGION: More and more pastors lift
entire sermons off the internet—but is the practice always wrong?" World
Magazine, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.worldmag.com/subscriber/displayarticle.cfm?id=10576
Bob Jensen's threads on plagiarism are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
April 28, 2005 email message from James L.
Morrison [morrison@unc.edu]
I am delighted to announce that The Technology
Source (TS) archives will be available to the Internet community courtesy of
the UNC School of Public Health Executive Master's Programs in Health Policy
and Administration, which has funded the reprogramming of TS content on
UNC's ibiblio server. As you may know, ibiblio is billed as "the public's
library and digital archive," and is one of the largest conservatories of
freely available information on the Internet (see the "About" page at
http://www.ibiblio.org/about.html ) . . . We have
a draft template of the archives posted on ibiblio at
www.technologysource.org and hope to have the
reprogrammed ejournal, complete with search engine and "read related"
features, available mid-summer at this address. I was deeply touched by the
400 plus letters I received in response to my announcement that the Michigan
Virtual University (MVU) was no longer able to host the TS archives. I was
unable to respond to every letter, but please know that all were
appreciated. Also know that MVU has posted a pointer from the
www.ts.mivu.org
address to the ibiblio site, so the some 13,000 or so
web sites that had links to TS are no longer broken links.
Jensen Comment: Since the demise of the
IAT, Jim has kept The Technology Source going until it hit a
funding crisis this year. The Technology Source is mostly devoted to
articles and commentaries about technology in education and is headquartered
at the University of North Carolina.
From Jim Mahar's great blog on April 27,
2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
The World Bank (at
least since 1991) has used NPV and IRR to study the
environmental impact of its decisions. While finding
the true cost and benefit of environmental questions
is notoriously difficult, it is something that must
be done.
From "A
Review of the Valuation of Environmental Costs and
Benefits in World Bank Projects" by Silva and
Pagiola. (Take a look at
the boxes for nice summaries!)
"If a project
activity causes environmental damage, that
damage needs to be included in the economic
analysis of the project together with the
activity�s benefits and any other damages. To do
otherwise would be to make the activity appear
artificially more attractive than it is.
Likewise, if additional costs are incurred to
avoid such damage, those costs need to be
included in the project costs considered in the
economic analysis."
From the
Economist article:
"The turning point
for this way of looking at things was in 1997.
In that year, the city government of New York
realised that changing agricultural practices
meant it would need to act to preserve the
quality of the city's drinking water. One way to
have done this would have been to install new
water-filtration plants, but that would have
cost $4 billion-6 billion up front, together
with annual running costs of $250m. Instead, the
government is paying to preserve the rural
nature of the Catskill Mountains from which New
York gets most of its water. It is spending
$250m on buying land to prevent development, and
paying farmers $100m a year to minimise water
pollution."
Actually I am including this in the blog not because
it is new per se, but because
-
it
is so interesting and thought provoking
-
it
could be used to motivate those who are less
inclined towards finance to see the importance
of NPV and IRR calculations--indeed I plan on
using it in my Finance 301 class in the fall!
if all of the environmental costs and benefits
were included, the world would be a better
place.
The new 64-bit Windows will do multimedia
better, but will it ever be as good as a Mac or as secure as a Mac?
To keep consumers satisfied in the meantime, Gates
said a new version of Windows, called ''Windows XP Professional x64
Edition," will begin shipping next month that can crunch more information at
one time, handling 64 bits of data compared with 32 bits in the previous
generation.
"A sneak peek at beefed-up Windows Microsoft looks to fill gap until new
version's launch," Boston Globe, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/business/technology/articles/2005/04/26/a_sneak_peek_at_beefed_up_windows/
Also see
http://www.adtmag.com/article.asp?id=11024
The answer is that Windows will probably
never be as good as the Mac operating system. My computer science friends
say that it is built on a wrong design from the start.
Mind-reading machine knows what you see
It is possible to read someone’s mind by remotely
measuring their brain activity, researchers have shown. The technique can
even extract information from subjects that they are not aware of
themselves. So far, it has only been used to identify visual patterns a
subject can see or has chosen to focus on. But the researchers speculate the
approach might be extended to probe a person’s awareness, focus of
attention, memory and movement intention. In the meantime, it could help
doctors work out if patients apparently in a coma are actually conscious.
Scientists have already trained monkeys to move a robotic arm with the power
of thought and to recreate scenes moving in front of cats by recording
information directly from the feline’s neurons (New Scientist print edition,
2 October 1999). But these processes involve implanting electrodes into
their brains to hook them up to a computer.
"Mind-reading machine knows what you see," New Scientist, April 25,
2005 ---
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7304
The steady disinvestment in higher
education by the states
Public colleges and universities, which enroll 77
percent of all students in higher education, drew more than half of their
operating support from taxpayer sources in the 1980s; today money from state
coffers provides about 30 percent of funding. At some of the nation's most
prominent public universities, such as the University of Virginia and the
University of Colorado, state funding contributes less than 10 percent of
university operating support. This steady disinvestment in higher education
by the states does not seem to reflect a clear public policy decision to
reduce higher education opportunities. It indicates instead structural
problems in state budgets and budgeting practices. Indeed, the criticism of
higher education for "exorbitant" tuition increases demonstrates a
continuing belief by legislators that access to higher education is more
essential than ever, both for individuals and for the state's economic
future, and that somehow universities should find a way to maintain access
despite the steady erosion of funding. In response to criticism from state
legislatures, and from the U.S. Congress as well, public universities have
been extraordinarily diligent and creative in diversifying their revenue
sources: today, no single revenue source dominates—as mentioned, state funds
provide 30 percent, tuition supplies about 20 percent, and gifts, grants,
and contracts (mostly for research) constitute 50 percent or more. In
effect, state taxpayers have become minority shareholders in their public
colleges and universities . . . My own view is that the higher education
universe is converging towards a new model, the "public purpose university,"
defined not by the old concepts of ownership and control (public vs.
private) but by the particular public goals it has elected to serve. No
longer can we expect Clark Kerr's multiversity to be all things to all
people. The core public purposes of higher education must be collectively
achieved (if they can be sustained at all) through specialization and
allocation of resources across all higher education institutions. In this
new model, both research and teaching missions will become more focused, and
more collaborative activity will occur between and among "public" and
"private" institutions, coordinated by statewide university systems.
Katharine Lyall, president emerita of the University of Wisconsin System, "A
Call for the Miracle Model," Carnegie Perspectives, The Carnegie
Foundation for Advancement of Teaching, April 2005 ---
http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/perspectives/perspectives2005.April.htm
Question
If we digitized all the words ever spoken by human beings, how much capacity
would we need to house them in one database?
Answer
Go to the link suggested by Amy Dunbar at
http://searchstorage.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid5_gci944596,00.html
Japan Is Running Out of Time
Given the daunting fiscal deficit and rapidly
ageing society, Japan is running out of time. A truly reformist leader can
not just leave decisions to the next generation. Mr. Koizumi and his team
are still the best bet to get the job done, but they owe it to the Japanese
people to create the foundation for a brighter future.
Jesper Koll, "Japan Is Running Out of Time," The Wall Street Journal,
April 26, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111446439694916359,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Jensen Comment: Japan, like the U.S. and Europe is doomed by entitlements.
See
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
From bottled water, hypocrisy springs
Oh, please, spare me your clean-living,
pore-hydrating, toxin-flushing aria about why you cannot put down your water
bottle! Go ahead and guzzle if you must. But did you realize that every time
you buy a plastic bottle of what is likely to be simply overpriced tap
water, you are actually committing an eco-sin that, ironically, will end up
polluting the very spring water you so venerate? You are. Here's the deal:
Every day millions of Americans buy bottled water instead of turning on the
tap. Water isn't bad for you (unless you drink too much of it while
exercising, dilute your blood and die, as doctors are starting to warn). But
anyway, usually water is fine. What is NOT fine is what those water bottles
are doing to the environment. For every ad showing a sun-dappled brook (or
sweaty hunk) there is a water bottle lying in a landfill, leaching toxic
chemicals and guaranteeing us toxic brooks (and hunks) for years.
"Unfortunately, millions of plastic bottles are being landfilled every year
and many of them are from the fast proliferation of bottled water," says
Mark Izeman, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council.
"These bottles break down and seep chemicals. Leaching landfills are one of
the largest sources of contaminated underground water."
Lenore Skenazy, "From bottled water, hypocrisy springs," Jewish World
Review, April 27, 2005 ---
http://jewishworldreview.com/0405/skenazy042705.php3
You can lead a horse to water Judge
Olszewski, but you can't make him drink
A Luzerne County judge sentenced an 18-year-old man
back to high school to earn his diploma. Raymond Michael Drexler, Mocanaqua,
pleaded guilty to possession of drug paraphernalia before Judge Peter Paul
Olszewski Jr. on Tuesday. When Judge Olszewski inquired about his life
status, Drexler said he quit high school after 11th grade to pursue
employment with a utility company. Drexler said he didn't get the job and
didn't re-enroll at Greater Nanticoke Area to complete his senior year.
"Maybe I should require you to go back to high school in order for you to
graduate," Judge Olszewski said. "What's your position on that, Mr.
Pendolphi?" Attorney Michael A. Pendolphi, who represented Drexler, said a
high school diploma is better than a GED for acquiring employment.
Citizens Voice, April 27, 2005 ---
http://www.citizensvoice.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=14420623&BRD=2259&PAG=461&dept_id=455154&rfi=6
Black student charged with hate crimes
that she claims weren't really intended to be hateful
Police officers in Bannockburn, Ill., have charged a black female student at
Trinity International University with sending the threatening notes that led
the institution to evacuate its minority students last week. The student
will be charged with disorderly conduct and a hate crime. Her name has not
been released. According to the police, the student confessed that she had
sent the notes because she wanted to convince her parents that she should
leave the university, which is located outside of Chicago. Law enforcement
and Trinity International officials now believe that the university’s
minority students were never in danger. The notes made specific threats of
violence toward minority students and prompted the university to send all of
its minority students to off-campus hotels. The evacuation attracted
nationwide attention from the news media. ith hate crimes
which she says weren't intended to be hateful
Scott Jaschik, "Hoax at Trinity International," Inside Higher Ed,
April 27, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/27/hoax
From the Washington Post on April 27,
2005
What are 14 states and a U.S. Congressman trying to ban on the Internet?
A.
Alcohol and cigarette sales
B.
Virtual hunting
C.
Pornography
D.
Blogging on political topics
How the computer was transforming
American society
Greenspan will ever be associated with the bubble
in high-tech stocks—first for warning, in 1996, that investors might be
succumbing to “irrational exuberance,” and later, after stock prices had
soared and investors truly had succumbed, for presiding over the collapse.
Greenspan’s critics tend to focus on his enthusiasm for Silicon Valley
before the crash; his defenders point out that, after all, the stock market
has begun to recover. Both points are somewhat tangential to his real
legacy. Greenspan’s primary interest was never the precise level of
tech-stock prices: it was how the computer was transforming American
society.
Roger Lowenstein, "How the Fed Learned to Love Technology," MIT's
Technology Review, April 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/issue/review_fed.asp?trk=nl
Small Business Bets Big on Technology
Small businesses are living up to their reputation
as engines of economic growth, a new study shows. In a survey to be released
today by the Hewlett-Packard Company, 81 percent of 399 small businesses
polled last month said they planned to increase their technology spending an
average 20 percent in the next two to three years, and 68 percent said they
would do so over the coming year. The dollars will go toward items like
computer hardware and software, upgrading of company Web sites, online
services and even Web logs, the respondents said.
Eve Tahnincioglu, "Small Business Bets Big on Technology, Study Says,"
The New York Times, April 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/27/business/27sbiz.html
Car Trouble: Should We Recall the U.S.
Auto Industry?
When Wharton management professor John Paul
MacDuffie is asked to explain why General Motors and Ford continue to take a
drubbing from their competitors, he thinks for a moment and replies: "You
can dig into the particulars around products and manufacturing processes for
an explanation, but I guess the broad impression is the U.S. companies don't
tend to be good learning organizations, which is something Toyota and Honda
are superb at." Whatever the U.S. car companies have learned in the past
year, they have learned it the hard way. Consider the opening sentence of
GM's 2003 annual report, published 12 months ag "Here's what's new about
GM's strategy this year: Nothing." That's the kind of bold statement that
can cut two ways. GM intended it to convey the message that the world's
largest automotive company was firing on all cylinders in its attempt to
reverse its declining fortunes, and saw no reason to change. Twelve months
later, though, the boast rings hollow. On April 19, General Motors posted a
first-quarter loss of $1.1 billion, its worst result since 1992. Just two
weeks earlier, on April 4, chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner had announced a
management shake-up that gave Wagoner the additional title of head of the
corporation's unprofitable North American unit, a post he had held before
becoming chief executive. In addition, GM's European operations are losing
money, the ratings service Moody's recently downgraded GM's debt to one step
above junk status, huge pension and healthcare liabilities have saddled the
company with seemingly intractable fixed costs, and its stock has lost
one-third of its value since January 1.
"Car Trouble: Should We Recall the U.S. Auto Industry?"
Knowledge@wharton,
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1183
With a 12% unemployment rate and a
sinking growth rate, Germany may lead Europe into a recession
Indeed, some economists say rates could remain as they are until 2006. The
German government, meanwhile, seems at a loss for a quick fix. It has begun
to overhaul the labor market, through a package of measures known as the
Hartz reforms. Mr. Rürup said that if Germany had a more flexible labor
market, it could create jobs with a lower growth rate. Critics say these
measures, while helpful, are only a half step. They make it easier for
employers to hire temporary workers and create entry-level jobs for people
who have been out of work. But they do not attack the job-protection rules
that make it hard to lay off workers. "They need to face down the unions,"
Mr. Mayer at Deutsche Bank said. "But they won't - neither the government
nor the opposition."
Mark Landler, "Fears Mount That Germany Faces Recession," The New York
Times, April 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/27/business/worldbusiness/27germany.html
And we thought everyone went to the
library primarily to read
The Houston City Council has passed new regulations
that allow librarians to kick out patrons whose "offensive bodily hygiene"
is a nuisance to others. Houston Mayor Bill White said there have been many
complaints about abuse of library facilities. Critics say the regulations
are aimed at keeping the homeless out of the libraries. New Rules Could Keep
Homeless Out Of Libraries. Houston City Council passed the regulations
Wednesday, which some consider a veiled attempt at prohibiting homeless
people from using the libraries.
"Houston Libraries Ban Bad Body Odor, Bathing," WFTV, April 28, 2005
---
http://www.wftv.com/news/4425183/detail.html
One book that won't be in any library:
What happened to free speech?
Apparently Apple, which has been cracking down on
unauthorized publication of stories about the company and its products,
didn't see it the same way. The computer firm has stopped selling all books
published by John Wiley & Sons at its Apple retail stores in apparent
retaliation. Last week, Young said he received a call from his publisher
saying that Apple had objections to his new book, "iCon Steve Jobs: The
Greatest Second Act in the History of Business," which is co-authored by
William L. Simon and is scheduled to go on sale next month. Despite the
publisher's offer to consider changes that the computer-maker may suggest,
"Apple said the only thing to fix this book is not to publish it, " Young
said.
Mathew Yi, "Apple yanks book on Jobs Company bans all of publisher's books
because of the one," San Francisco Chronicle, April 27, 2005 ---
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/04/27/BUGNBCFOHP1.DTL&type=tech
Two students suspended: The Penis
Monologues celebrate “V-Day”
The Vagina Monologues and schools across the nation
celebrate “V-Day” (short for Vagina Day) every year. But when the College
Republicans at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island rained on the
celebrations of V-Day by inaugurating Penis Day and staging a satire called
The Penis Monologues, the official reaction was horror. Two participating
students, Monique Stuart and Andy Mainiero, have just received sharp letters
of reprimand and have been placed on probation by the Office of Judicial
Affairs. The costume of the P-Day “mascot” — a friendly looking “penis”
named Testaclese, has been confiscated and is under lock and key in the
office of the assistant dean of student affairs, John King.
"Why Can’t They “Just Get Along”?" National Review, April 29, 2005
---
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/sommers200505020808.asp
Music: In My Rear View Mirror
(turn your speakers up) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/rearview.htm
Fantastic wildflowers forwarded
by Paula ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/wildflowers.htm
In the
United States, more prisons are built each year than schools and colleges.
Jesús Sepúlveda
Jensen Comment: I did not verify this claim.
Is it a good year or a bad
year for women in terms of selections to the National Academy of Sciences?
A record 19 women are among those selected to
become members of the National Academy of Sciences. The academy announced 72
new members Tuesday.
Inside Higher Ed, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/04/qt
From the Old War:
New account of Hitler's last days from a living witness
Now, as the 60th anniversary of the end of the
war in Europe nears, Ms Flegel has spoken out for the first time about her
experiences - of Hitler's final hours, of her friendship with the
"brilliant" Magda Goebbels, and her jealous loathing for Eva Braun. Her
testimony casts fresh light on the last days of the Nazi era and has never
appeared in the countless books written about Hitler. . . .
She is the last surviving female witness to have
been inside the bunker. Traudl Junge - Hitler's secretary, whose memoirs
provided the inspiration for the Oscar-nominated film Downfall, and who gave
numerous interviews to journalists and historians - died in 2002. The only
other survivor, 88-year-old Rochus Misch, Hitler's telephonist, refuses to
talk.
Luke Harding, "'His authority was extraordinary. He was charming' - Hitler's
nurse on his final hours: Survivor of bunker tells of admiration for
Goebbels' wife and hatred for Eva Braun," The Guardian, May 2, 2005
---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/secondworldwar/story/0,14058,1474601,00.html
From the New War:
General Tommy Franks called Feith “the fucking stupidest guy on the face of
the earth”
Fifteen hundred people report to Feith in the
Pentagon, where he is known for the profligacy of his policy suggestions.
Tommy Franks, who led the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, has been much
quoted as calling Feith “the fucking stupidest guy on the face of the
earth,” apparently for ideas he proposed to Franks and his planners.
Franks’s view is not universally shared by the military. Marine General
Peter Pace, who has just been nominated to be chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, says of Feith, “Early on, he didn’t realize that the way he
presented his positions, the way he was being perceived, put him in a bit of
a hole. But he changed his ways.” Apparently, he became more consultative,
particularly with his counterparts on the Joint Chiefs. Pace, who calls
Feith a “true American patriot,” said he did not understand Franks’s attack.
“This is not directed at any individual,” Pace said, “but the less secure an
individual is in his thought processes and in his own capacities, the more
prone they were to be intimidated by Doug, because he’s so smart.” (A
spokesman for Franks, Michael Hayes, said in an e-mail that the General
would not comment for this article: “What do you think he has to gain by
talking about Feith?”) . . . He has the capacity, however, for
self-deprecation. He told me that when Franks’s characterization of his
brainpower became public he jokingly suggested to his staff that he call a
press conference to deny that he was in fact the “fucking stupidest guy” on
earth.
Jeffrey Goldberg, "A LITTLE LEARNING: What Douglas Feith knew, and when he
knew it," The New Yorker, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050509fa_fact
History may
one day judge the removal of Saddam Hussein as the spark that set off a
democratic revolution across the Muslim world. But if Iraq disintegrates
historians will deal harshly with the President and his tacticians, the
men most directly responsible for taking a noble idea—the defeat of a
tyrant and the introduction of liberty—and letting it fail. Feith, like
his superiors in the Pentagon and the White House, is not given to
public doubt, but in our last conversation he seemed
uncharacteristically humble. “When I was in Vienna,” Feith said, “I went
to the Ringstrasse, these enormous buildings, most of which were built
twenty, twenty-five years before World War One. These buildings were
built as the headquarters of a world empire, and they were built for the
ages—enormous, imperially scaled buildings. They were built to last. But
these people were absolutely on the verge of destruction of their
empire, and they didn’t see it. And that was a humbling experience.
Maybe General Tommy Franks
should've met this guy first
Police arrested a 21-year-old man early
Saturday after he allegedly assaulted a pizza delivery driver who refused to
take marijuana as payment for a pie, police said. The man, charged with
robbery, was released from the Cass County Jail after posting $5,000 bond.
Pizza Patrol driver Atif Yasin thought the man was asleep when he arrived to
deliver a medium pizza and 20-ounce soda. After knocking a few times and
calling the man on his cell phone, Yasin said he answered the door in his
boxers. The man took the pizza, spent a few minutes looking for money and
then offered to pay with marijuana, Yasin said.
"Cops: Man Tries to Pay for Pizza With Pot," ABC News, May 2, 2005
---
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=720604
Will feminists buy into this
one?
The argument used to be that women were more apt to accept the most boring
jobs
Women now outnumber men in managerial and
professional positions, and most companies have installed policies that aim
to help their leaders balance the demands of job and family. Yet three
decades after a woman first became chief executive of a Fortune 500 company,
fewer than 2 percent of the biggest corporations are run by women. Executive
recruiters and corporate boards could be forgiven for asking themselves why.
The answer, experts are beginning to conclude, has less to do with
discrimination in the corporate suite or pressures at home than with
frustration and boredom on the job. "Men will grit their teeth and bear
everything, while women will say: 'Is this all there is? I need more than
this!' " said Mabel M. Miguel, a professor of management at the
Kenan-Flagler Business School at the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
Claudia H. Deutsch, "Behind the Exodus of Executive Women: Boredom," The
New York Times, May 1, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/01/business/yourmoney/01women.html
"Women are more confident about job
security than men are, but women are less excited about work," Headlines,
BizEd from the AACSB, January/February 2005, Page 8
According to
the survey, 57.9 percent of women MBAs say they have job security, while
49 percent of men feel that way. Most of these women find their work
agreeable: 75.2 percent feel they have the ability to live according to
their own values; 59.9 percent feel challenged by their work; 57.6
percent feel well-paid; and 56.3 percent feel satisfied.
Nonetheless,
41.4 percent of the women say they are not excited about their work,
while 67.2 percent of the men with MBAs say they are. Perhaps this is
because 63.9 percent of women MBAs do not believe their work contributes
to society in a valuable way, compared to 55.8 percent of men MBAs who
feel that way. Of those with MBAs, 56.8 percent of women are likely to
be dissatisfied with their job's capacity to "make the world a better
place," compared to 44.5 percent of men.
These survey
figures are disturbing, says Anna K. Lloyd, executive director and
president of C200. "If women MBAs aren't linking their work to societal
value, then fewer stellar women will be drawn to business careers; and
those who are may not put their full energy and spirit into their work,"
she says. She believes further research is necessary to determine what
is causing the gap between men's and women's satisfaction with
work--whether it's related to a discrepancy between the kinds of jobs
men and women get, whether it holds true for entrepreneurial women as
well as corporate women, and whether it's a general feeling among MBA
women that springs from other root causes.
Additional
segments of the survey investigate how men and women rate themselves at
executing specific business tasks, such as handling money and meeting
deadlines, and whether they expect to be earning enough money to support
a family or simply to provide for themselves. For additional
information about the C200 survey, contact Elizabeth Koons at
Sommerfield Communications at
elizabeth@sommerfield.com.
A controversial book
by Warren Farrell entitled Why Men Earn More uses government wage
data to show that the "pay gap” has become an ideological myth. His latest
controversial book is called The Myth of Male Power ---
http://snipurl.com/MythOfMalePower
The Swedes would've never
attempted this research if they'd met some of our
beer-drinking U.S. rednecks
We already know that beer
doesn't actually make you fat but
rather
fights cancer while promoting
world peace and understanding and a brighter future for all
our children. It's no surprise then that we can now confirm
what the super-intelligent if somehat wobbly hacks at
Vulture Central have known for years: alcohol makes you
cleverer. That's to say, a Swedish team has shown that mice
fed with moderate amounts of alcohol grew new nerve cells in
the brain. The full implications of the Karolinska Institute
research - which appears in the International Journal of
Neuropsychopharmacology - are unclear, but lead boffin
Stefan Brene told the BBC: "We believe that the increased
production of new nerve cells during moderate alcohol
consumption can be important for the development of alcohol
addiction and other long-term effects of alcohol on the
brain."
Lester Haines, "Beer makes you clever: official," The
Register, April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/29/booze_makes_you_clever/
|
Perplexing ethical questions in
neuroscience?
The conferees are considering such issues as: If a
brain scanning technology could reliably predict that someone will commit
violence, should they be subject to prior restraint, or required to take
medications that would moderate that tendency? Do people who have suffered
painful abuse have an obligation to retain that memory or do they have the
right to blunt it? Perhaps perpetrators of violence should be required to
retain the memory of their evil, while victims would be allowed to moderate
their recollections?
Ronald Bailey, "Minds on Brains Hobnobbing with neuroscientists and
theologians," ReasonOnLine, March 22, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/links/links041805.shtml
Philosophy of Science: Darwinians may be
their own worst enemy
Ruse, a philosopher of science at Florida State
University, occupies a distinct position in the heated debates about
evolution and creationism. He is both a staunch supporter of evolution and
an ardent critic of scientists who he thinks have hurt the cause by
habitually stepping outside the bounds of science into social theory. In his
latest book, ''The Evolution-Creation Struggle,'' published by Harvard
University Press later this month, Ruse elaborates on a theme he has been
developing in a career dating back to the 1960s: Evolution is controversial
in large part, he theorizes, because its supporters have often presented it
as the basis for self-sufficient philosophies of progress and materialism,
which invariably wind up in competition with religion.
Peter Dizikes, "In the ongoing struggle between evolution and creationism,
says philosopher of science Michael Ruse, Darwinians may be their own worst
enemy," Boston Globe, May 1, 2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/ideas/articles/2005/05/01/evolutionary_war/
Question
What is the new meaning of "the world is flat?"
Answer
The metaphor of a flat world, used by Friedman
to describe the next phase of globalization, is ingenious. It came to him
after hearing an Indian software executive explain how the world's economic
playing field was being leveled. For a variety of reasons, what economists
call ''barriers to entry'' are being destroyed; today an individual or
company anywhere can collaborate or compete globally. Bill Gates explains
the meaning of this transformation best. Thirty years ago, he tells
Friedman, if you had to choose between being born a genius in Mumbai or
Shanghai and an average person in Poughkeepsie, you would have chosen
Poughkeepsie because your chances of living a prosperous and fulfilled life
were much greater there. ''Now,'' Gates says, ''I would rather be a genius
born in China than an average guy born in Poughkeepsie.''
Fareed Zakaria, "'The World Is Flat': The Wealth of Yet More Nations,"
The New York Times, May 1, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/01/books/review/01ZAKARIA.html
New technology for learning
Daniel Dormevil used to slog through sentences,
sounding out words one at a time. Hindered by a reading disability and
attention deficit disorder, he would often lose his place and forget what he
had read soon after setting down the book. But since November, the Cambridge
Rindge and Latin High School senior has been able to hear the words as he
reads. Using a computer text reader, Dormevil no longer looks out the window
or watches the words ''run off the page" during reading class. Listening to
the text read aloud as he follows a digital highlighter that bounces from
word to word, he can keep his place. Words that used to lay lifeless on the
page now speak to him and create images in the 17-year-old's head. Dormevil
belongs to an expanding group of students with learning disabilities who are
using print-to-speech software programs to become better readers and
writers. In Massachusetts, students with disabilities have begun using the
programs to take standardized tests. This month, some 270 Massachusetts
students, with various disabilities, in grades 6 through 10, will take the
MCAS using text-to-speech software. Next year, elementary school students
will likely be able to take the test on the software in Massachusetts, one
of only a few states allowing the practice. While reading, these students
often failed to recognize words they would use casually in conversation. But
with the help of audio, highlighted words and phrases, and a built-in
dictionary that pronounces and defines words at a point and click, weak
readers receive the help they need to improve, educators and researchers
say. ''Before, I would be able to read most of the words, but I wouldn't
understand what the whole thing meant," Dormevil said. ''But it's a lot
easier being able to hear it. I just learn better that way." Teachers liken
the effect to runners who train with faster athletes to get used to a
quicker pace. Students who used to get bogged down in chapter one can now
read books cover to cover. It's because they can focus less on what the
words are, and more on what the words mean.
Peter Schworm, "Hear words, see a difference," Boston Globe, May 1,
2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/education/articles/2005/05/01/hear_words_see_a_difference/
Graduate Education From US News
---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/home.htm
Yet another deconstructionist with no
vision of reconstruction
“One of the peculiar phenomena of our time is the
renegade Liberal,” wrote George Orwell in 1945. He meant not the classical
liberal who believed in individual freedoms and small government but the
leftist liberal who glorified communist experiments and disdained
middle-class life. To Orwell, the existence of intellectuals who loved the
Soviet Union despite the purges, mocked “bourgeois liberty” despite the
pleasing bourgeois circumstances of their own lives, and identified with
revolutionary movements that would speedily ship them off to camps—this was
a fact in need of explanation. The same puzzle is presented by today’s
leading leftist intellectual, Noam Chomsky. For 40 years, in books,
lectures, articles, and TV and radio shows, Chomsky has pioneered the
leftist critique of Western imperialism, media conglomerates, and U.S.-style
capitalism. The charges he raises are familiar—corporations subjugate the
Third World, mass media peddle pro-capitalist propaganda, etc.—but he
evidently has the ability to make them seem fresh; millions idolize him as
the clear-eyed conscience of the times. Further to his advantage, while
Chomsky’s discourse is extreme and accusatory, his demeanor is equable and
deliberate. He is, after all, a distinguished professor at MIT and the most
renowned linguist of the 20th century. For many, the combination of virulent
radicalism and reasoned temperament is wholly seductive, and attacks upon
Chomsky by conservatives and centrists have only granted him a martyr’s
aura. Chomsky’s antipathy toward the U.S. government has never wavered. Even
9/11 was fitted to the theme of U.S. guilt. The killing of 3,000 Americans,
accompanied by the “you had it coming” glee of some leftists abroad, put
many American progressives on the defensive. But not Chomsky. In the weeks
after the attacks, he systematically interpreted them as a logical outcome
of U.S. history and policy.
Mark Bauerlein "Deconstructing Chomsky: America’s leading leftist
intellectual sees what he wants to see and disregards the rest,"
ReasonOnLine, April 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/0504/cr.mb.deconstructing.shtml
On the The Anti-Chomsky Reader, edited by Peter Collier and David
Horowitz, San Francisco: Encounter Books, 260 pages, $17.95
Bob Jensen's threads on "The Evil Empire" are at
http://www.reason.com/0504/cr.mb.deconstructing.shtml
XBRL Update: An Interview With Neal
Hannon
If you don't know about XBRL, then you don't know the most important
innovation in financial reporting and investment analysis taking place
around the world. Neal Hannon is interviewed about XBRL at
http://ria.thomson.com/journals/zmcmart.pdf
Although articles in this journal are not normally free, the above article
is a "free sample" from this journal at
http://ria.thomson.com/estore/detail.asp?ID=ZMCM
I suggest that you download and read Neal's summary of the history and
current state of XBRL. Neal also uses this interview to make a case for
management accountancy.
On the negative side I think the $230
subscription price for six issues makes the Cost Management journal
itself another library rip off ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournals
In fairness, the journal is aimed more at the corporate world than academe
under the strategy, I assume, that corporations can afford nearly $40 for
each issue. Like virtually all such exorbitantly-priced journals, the
editorial board has some leading scholars from elite universities.
Neal Hannon is one of the early pioneers in
XBRL and does us a great service in both promoting XBRL and communicating
the latest and greatest advances in XBRL. Some of his communications on
this topic are quoted extensively at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm#TimelineXBRL
May 3, 2005 reply from Roger Debreceny
[roger@DEBRECENY.COM]
Many of the
presentations from the 11th XBRL International Conference in Boston,
Massachusetts have been uploaded to the XII website at
http://www.xbrl.org/PastEvents/
A great RSS feed on
XBRL is at
http://www.xbrlspy.com/
Microsoft has a
Solution Showcase and Video at
http://www.microsoft.com/office/showcase/xbrl/default.mspx
Bob Jensen's threads on XBRL are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/XBRLandOLAP.htm
Even for the middle class: Housing
price-salary gap widens
Housing prices are outstripping wage increases in
many areas, meaning more people are either spending above their means or
living in dilapidated conditions, according to a pair of studies being
released today by the Center for Housing Policy, a coalition pushing for
more affordable housing. It's generally accepted that a family should not
spend more than 30 percent of its income on housing to ensure there is
enough money for other necessities. But in a recent six-year period, the
number of low- and middle-income working families paying more than half
their income for housing has increased 76 percent. In 2003, 4.2 million
working families spent more than half their income on housing, up from 2.4
million in 1997 . . . Meanwhile, the median-priced home in 2003 was
$176,000, up more than 11 percent from 2001. During this time, national
median salaries went up only 4 percent for licensed practical nurses (to
$33,000), 3 percent for elementary schoolteachers ($43,000) and 7 percent
for police officers ($45,000).
Stobhan McDonough, "Housing price-salary gap widens," NC Times, April
28, 2005 ---
http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/04/29/business/news/12_12_054_28_05.prt
The middle class: No
houses and then no college education
Pondering those staggering
costs, one can't help wondering who, exactly, can afford
this most necessary of luxuries. The answer,
increasingly, is the rich. Roughly half of American
families make less than $50,000 a year, but according to
The Chronicle of Higher Education, just 30 percent of
current college freshmen come from that group.
Hubert B. Herring, "At These Prices, the Poor Get
Poorer, the Rich Get College," The New York Times, May
1, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NoHouseNoCollege
Advice for the middle
class
If you've got some really smart kids, it might pay to
work at minimum wage or even go on welfare
In an effort to outdo its
rivals, Yale University said yesterday that it would no
longer require parents earning less than $45,000 a year
to pay anything toward their children's educations.
Harvard announced a similar program last year, freeing
parents who earn $40,000 or less from paying anything,
and the change helped raise its applications to record
levels. Several of Yale's other competitors, including
Princeton, have taken a slightly different approach by
no longer requiring loans for low-income students, and
they also believe the move helped increase applications.
Greg Winter, "Yale Cuts Expenses for Poor in a Move to
Beat," The New York Times, March 4, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/04/education/04yale.html
Also see
http://www.insidehighered.com/insider/yale_plays_catch_up_on_financial_aid
Paying for College I was
disappointed by "Will The Aid Be There?" [US News, April
18]. My husband and I have good jobs but make too much
to get need-based aid for our college students. We have
a goal that our children will graduate without a
mountain of student loan debt. So we work extra hours,
use the equity in our home, and put everything toward
college costs. Most middle-class families pay for
college themselves.
KATHERINE DAVIS Moon Township, Pa. ---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/letters/articles/050509/9lett.htm
Great Advice for U.S.
college students: Only do it soon
The rates most student
borrowers pay are still based on three-month Treasury
bill rates from last May, when T-bills were near record
lows. But the ultra-low rates are about to disappear. On
July 1, many student loan rates make their annual
interest-rate adjustment, and if recent rates on
Treasury bills are a guide, rates will jump about 2
percentage points. Rates on Stafford loans, the most
common student loans and ones that adjust annually,
could rise to around 4.6 percent from the current 2.77
percent for students still in school, in the
after-school "grace" period, or with loans in deferment.
That's if T-bill rates remain where they were last
Monday. For loans in repayment, rates could climb to
about 5.25 percent from 3.37. But many borrowers still
have a chance to lock in a rate very close to the one in
effect today and keep it there for the life of their
debt. They can do this by "consolidating" their Stafford
or other guaranteed student loans.
Albert B. Crenshaw, "Students Can Lock In Low Loan
Rates," Washington Post, May 1, 2005; Page F01,
---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/04/30/AR2005043000186.html?sub=AR
Illegal immigration
from Central America has spiked
The flow of Central American
immigrants bound for the United States has surged 25% or
more this year, say government and aid agency officials,
who point to a sharp climb in deportations, injury
reports and need for assistance as the basis for their
estimates. Confronted with increasingly bleak economies
in their home countries and rising gang violence, the
immigrants, many of them young, are heading north
through Mexico at a rate that Mexican and Honduran
authorities agree has gone through the roof.
Chris Kraul, "A Surge South of Mexico Illegal
immigration from Central America has spiked. Deprivation
at home and a growing support network in the U.S. are
factors," Los Angeles Times, May 1, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ImmigrationExplodes
CNN might be trying to jam blogs
critical of the network
Suspicious, Lewis checked other
blogs and soon noticed a pattern: He
found a lot of similar comments
about CNN on sites like
DesperateHousewives,
CrankyGreg and
BradBlog.
All the comments were posted by
someone called Joseph or Thoth, and
used the same language. Lewis came
across roughly three new spam
comments a day. Lewis initially
suspected CNN of being behind the
mysterious posts. Lewis thought CNN
might be trying to jam blogs
critical of the network by spamming
them. The network, or a surrogate,
was posting comments on blogs using
a technique called "keyword
stuffing," Lewis claimed. Keyword
stuffing was a technique commonly
used at the height of the dot-com
boom to raise a site's search-engine
ranking. Stuff a site with common
search terms, or keywords, and its
ranking would rise. But search
engines are wise to the technique.
Now, when search sites detect
blatant keyword stuffing, they often
penalize the offending site by
delisting it from their indexes, or
removing it from the first 100
results. Lewis said CNN may be
keyword-stuffing sites critical of
the network, causing the sites to be
delisted by search engines.
David Cohn, "CNN on the Spam
Attack?" Wired News, May 2,
2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67371,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_6
Liberal bias on PBS?
The Republican chairman of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting is aggressively
pressing public television to correct what he and other
conservatives consider liberal bias, prompting some
public broadcasting leaders - including the chief
executive of PBS - to object that his actions pose a
threat to editorial independence.
Elizabeth Jensen, "Republican Chairman Exerts Pressure
on PBS, Alleging Biases," The New York Times, May
2, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTMay2
What did you say?
Watching less television are we?
"A Shrinking Wasteland As media converge, is it time to
cancel Howard Beale?" by Julian Sanchez, ReasonOnLine,
April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/links/links042905.shtml
For one thing,
we're shifting to more participatory
media, like the Internet. American
teens and young adults already
spend less time
watching
television than they do online, and
the people with the most experience
using the Net
spend several hours fewer
each week
watching TV than do their less-wired
counterparts.
But the
way we watch
TV programming
has also changed. Where past
generations gathered 'round the
vacuum tubes to listen, absorbed, to
the latest adventures of
Lamont Cranston,
we tend to
consume radio as background while
driving, jogging, or working. A
recent
Kaiser Family Foundation study
found that
younger Americans are increasingly
doing the same kind of multitasking:
The TV may be on as background while
we surf the Web, but only as one
more pane to ALT-TAB to as we graze
in our pixellated pastures.
Continued in the article
|
All dressed up with
nowhere to go
Now that the Airbus A380
has taken to the skies on its first test flight, this
giant bird needs someplace to land. For Airbus, selling
its new superjumbo jet to the world's airports has been
only slightly less strenuous than selling it to
airlines. Representatives of airports in Europe, Asia,
and the US gathered here on Thursday, energized after
Wednesday's smooth flight, to discuss how they are
getting ready for the A380, which is scheduled to go
into service in the middle of next year with Singapore
Airlines. But as the talk at the conference drifted to
the costly, unglamorous business of reinforcing taxiways
and retrofitting gates, some of the excitement faded.
The A380, people here acknowledge, is going to be more
of a burden, and a risk, for airports than Airbus likes
to suggest.
"Airports less than eager to make room for big new
Airbus," Taipei Times, May 1, 2005, Page 12 ---
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/bizfocus/archives/2005/05/01/2003252735
Also see
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/29/business/worldbusiness/29airbus.html
Don't look for
friendly Airbus skies in India
Air India has taken strong exception to the
"misinformation" campaign launched by Airbus Industry
after the European consortium lost the over $6.5 billion
contract to its arch rival Boeing Aircraft Company for
supply of 50 medium and long range capacity jets to the
airline. "A-I takes strong exception to the
misinformation campaign" by Airbus on the bidding
process followed by the airline Board of Directors and
termed it as "mischievous and misleading" the public,
Air India is understood to have stated in a letter to
the Civil Aviation Ministry. The airline board had
decided to go in for 50 Boeing aircraft comprising
B-777s and 787s Dreamliner.
"AI objects to Airbus 'outbursts' ,"NDTV Profit,
May 1, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NDTVMay1
Taxpayers of Los
Angeles subsidize our (yawn) new movies
The subsidies would amount
to $15 million a year in cash giveaways to an industry
that has managed to survive for 100 years without them.
This from a city that is facing a structural deficit of
$300 million ("structural" being government-ese for "too
big to actually fix"). Last November, Hahn's City Hall
dished up a slab of pork to Hollywood when it granted a
tax exemption for film industry workers who earn up to
$300,000 a year, and a targeted tax break for
productions costing less than $12 million.
Matt Welch, "The Rubes in L.A. City Hall Have Swallowed
Hollywood's Hard-Luck Story," Los Angeles Times,
April 28, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/LAtimesApril28
Google Unites Europe
I first wrote about this idea earlier this month. At
the time, the plan had what one British writer termed a
"distinct Gallic spin," and seemed designed to wage a
war of cultural defense against Google, that big,
bad American search engine-company that got the jump on
Europe by announcing
a library indexing project of its own late
last year.Here's the set-up,
courtesy of the Agence France-Presse:
"Google's plans have rattled the cultural establishment
in Paris, raising fears that the French language and
ideas could be just sidelined on the worldwide web,
which is already dominated by English. ... Chirac has
asked Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres
and France's National Library president Jean-Noel
Jeanneney to study how collections in libraries in
France and Europe could be put more widely and more
rapidly on the internet."
Robert MacMillan,
"Google Unites Europe," Washington Post, April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/04/29/AR2005042900432.html
Real life courtrooms no longer allowed to
be like what you see on television
The Iowa Court of Appeals today threw out the
first-degree murder conviction of a Des Moines man who claimed he didn't get
a fair trial because prosecutors called him a coward several times and a
liar. Jarmaine Allen said the description unfairly swayed jurors against him
and amounted to prosecutorial misconduct. The court agreed.
Frank Santiago, "Court throws out 1995 Polk murder conviction," The Des
Moines Register, April 28, 1005 ---
http://www.dmregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050428/NEWS01/504280443/1001/NEWS
Sex on Demand (or else)
Leaders of New Zealand’s 30,000-strong Muslim
community have condemned a renegade group that says it is okay for men to
hit their wives and that women should have sex whenever their husbands want
it, a newspaper reported Sunday. The advice on the website of the Muslim
Association of Canterbury (MAC) has outraged community and women’s support
groups who say it misquotes religious texts to justify domestic violence and
rape, the Sunday Star-Times reported. The website says it is not permitted
for a woman who believes in Allah to forsake her husband’s bed, and that,
though hitting is not the way to discipline a wife, it could be resorted to
“when all other means are exhausted”, the paper said.
"Muslim federation condemns renegade group over wife-beating stance,"
Kahleej Times, May 1, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/SexOnDemand
Music for the Summer Break: http://www.jessiesweb.com/blessing.htm
I will soon be taking a break
from publishing Tidbits and New Bookmarks. My wife is
scheduled her eighth back surgery. The two 18-inch rods that were bolted to
spine in October never did work correctly and have been very painful. Now
these rods will be removed and replaced with more bone fusions. I will be
busy in our mountains helping her recover. I leave Texas on May 12 after my
last final examination. I may have time for one or two more editions of
Tidbits.
Pictures of Erika ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbits/2005/ErikaBits.htm
Please check on your
bank account ---
http://www.scottstratten.com/movie.html
Update on the dirty
secrets of academe: Are we elitist and self-aggrandizing to a fault?
I’m glad to report that the full professor soon
left the university, the book came out, I got tenure, was promoted, and life
has been rosy ever since. But the professor’s elitist drivel still sticks in
my craw because his snobbery runs so rampant in the academy today — as what
I experienced with the dopey professor from the Department of Cinema and
Comparative Literature.
Stephen G. Bloom, "Hello Sy Hershman, Goodbye Bob Woodward," Inside
Higher Ed, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/04/bloom3
Update on the dirty
secrets of our credit card systems: A hidden "tax" on those that pay by
check or cash
Per-transaction "interchange" fees are a silent
but very effective tax. And as card issuers continue down the perilous path
of not charging their customers anything for the credit cards they use, the
thirst for "tax money" becomes ever greater.But the real rub is that
retailers will pass along the higher premium-card fees to all customers,
including those who don't qualify for a credit card, let alone a premium
card. Checks and cash still account for more than 50% of all retail
payments, and the sad truth is that it is precisely those who can pay only
by check or cash who are footing most of the bill for the costs of these
cards. In most tax systems the wealthy pay most of the taxes; in this model,
those who can't or don't use credit cards are paying for those who do
qualify for them. Here's the real dirty secret of the card-issuing industry:
Because card regulations demand that cardholders pay no more for goods and
services than cash and check customers, the working poor are subsidizing the
vacation points earned by America's top income classes.
"A Dirty Little Secret About Credit Cards," The Wall Street Journal,
May 4, 2005; Page A19 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111517843155624225,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Bob Jensen's threads on
"Dirty Secrets of Credit Card Companies and Credit Rating Agencies" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#FICO
Why should you be taking daily doses of
Vitamin B6?
High daily levels of vitamin B6 may reduce the
risk of getting colon cancer by 58 percent, claims a new study from Harvard
Medical School. The research, published in the May 4 issue of the Journal of
the National Cancer Institute, builds on other studies that have already
indicated a strong preventive effect from the vitamin. "There are several
smaller studies that have found a protective effect from dietary intakes of
B6," said lead researcher Esther K. Wei, an instructor in medicine at
Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital. However, "this is
the first large study of women to look at blood levels of B6" and find a
protective effect, she added.
Kathleen Doheny, "Vitamin B6 Cuts Colon Cancer Risk High daily intake
reduced odds by 58 percent, study found," HealthDay, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.healthday.com/view.cfm?id=525506
The National Institute of Health has a great
Website on recommended dosages and sources of vitamins. The Table of
Contents for Vitamin B6 is as follows at
http://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/vitaminb6.asp
Vitamin B6: What is it?
What foods provide vitamin B6?
What is the Recommended Dietary Allowance for vitamin B6 for adults?
When can a vitamin B6 deficiency occur?
What are some current issues and controversies about vitamin B6?
What is the relationship between vitamin B6, homocysteine, and heart
disease?
What is the health risk of too much vitamin B6?
Selected Food Sources of vitamin B6
References
Reviewers
Jensen Comment: I think the connection
between colon cancer and vitamin B6 was made after the above pages were
written.
Tax incentives to buy hybrid cars ---
http://www.autoblog.com/entry/7662346356845435/
A tax expert ( W. O. Mills III
[wom@WOMILLS.COM] ) forwarded a link
to
http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/tax_hybrid.shtml
May 6, 2005 reply from Deborah Johnson
[vicjohn@SPRINTMAIL.COM]
An interesting link,
which goes to support the hypothesis that the Federal Government is
"confused".
The instructions
indicate you claim the "clean fuel tax deduction" on the form 1040, in
the section on "Tax, Credits and Payments". Then goes on to instruct you
to write in on line 35. Line 35 on a form 1040 is the place you add up
all the adjustments to gross income.
Deborah Johnson
Miami, FL
College Slogans (really)
Still others appear to need re-thinking. Bentley
College says it’s “America’s Business University” and Mississippi College
calls itself “A Christian University,” even though they’re both colleges.
Bucknell University clarifies its standing as “A College-Like University.”
Teens like the word “like.” Something seems missing in Berklee College of
Music’s “Nothing Conservatory About It,” whereas Thiel College’s “Thiel
Time” could be confused with “Miller Time” or “Tool Time.” Trinity Western
University’s “Unwrap the Universe, Peel Back its Shroud” sounds vaguely
obscene, as does the University of Richmond’s “Do it With Your Head.” Don’t
The Sage Colleges and Quincy College send mixed messages with “Change Your
Mind” and “Think Again"?
Mark J. Drozdowski, "Gaglines," Inside Higher Ed, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/06/drozdowski
Jensen Comment: None seem to use more appropriate slogans like "Butts Off
Here" or "Hangover Hell" or "Class Avoidance Time."
Book Slogans (well sort of anyway)
Name that famous book from just these phrases: "pagan harpooneers,"
"stricken whale," "ivory leg."
Name that famous book from just these phrases:
"pagan harpooneers," "stricken whale," "ivory leg." Or how about this one:
"old sport." Yes, it's Herman Melville's Moby Dick and F. Scott Fitzgerald's
The Great Gatsby, respectively, but the words aren't just a game. They are
Statistically Improbable Phrases, the result of a new Amazon.com feature
that compares the text of hundreds of thousands of books to reveal an
author's signature constructions. The
haiku-like
SIPs are not the only word toys on the site.
Customers can also see the
100 most common words
in a book. Penny pinchers -- or those with back
problems -- can check stats on how many words a volume delivers per dollar
or per ounce. (Bargain hunters will love the Penguin Classics edition of
War and Peace that delivers 51,707 words per dollar.)
Customers can also see how complicated the
writing is (yes, post-structuralist Michel Foucault's
prose is foggier than Immanuel Kant's), and how
much education you need to understand a book. (To understand French
philosopher Pierre Bourdieu, you'll need a second Ph.D.) While such services
seem to have little value and have generated scant publicity, except from
bibliophilic thrill seekers, web watchers say
the madcap stats aren't just for kicks. Ray Singel, "Judging a
Book by Its Contents," Wired News, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,67430,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1
May 6, 2005 reply from Bender, Ruth
[r.bender@CRANFIELD.AC.UK]
This is absolutely
fascinating! I tried it on my own book (Corporate Financial Strategy)
and took great issue with the results it brought up as SIPs - until I
then did a search on those words in my Word text of the book and found
that yes, I had used the phrases several times!
I can see hours of
wasted time ahead as I test out all the core finance books and chose my
course text by SIPs alone!
Dr Ruth Bender
Lecturer in Finance
Cranfield School of Management
Cranfield Bedfordshire MK43 0AL United Kingdom
From the University of
Pennsylvania: Eight Great Business Plans, But Only One Is the Winner
Ask anyone involved in the healthcare field -- doctors, insurers, drug
makers, and certainly patients -- and they will tell you that the industry
is in dire need of an overhaul. But chaos, which often precedes change,
presents opportunities too. Five of the eight teams in the Venture Finals
of the 2005
Wharton Business Plan
Competition see promise in the upheavals that are
roiling the healthcare sector. These teams proposed businesses that would,
among other things, help in the treatment of critical wounds, prevent drug
abuse and test for serious illnesses such as breast cancer. The three
remaining teams focused on information technology, offering plans to prevent
Internet fraud, improve college fundraising and enhance "mission-critical"
computing . . . The winner of the 2005 Venture Finals is FibrinX. Team
members collected the $20,000 first prize as well as in-kind donations of
accounting, legal and consulting services, and say they hope to turn their
plan into a startup company after they graduate. "We have several different
options we are looking at, but this is definitely top of mind," Gosalia
said. They are already fishing for investors.
"Eight Great Business Plans, But Only One Is the Winner ... ,"
Knowledge@wharton ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1190
The high-tech political candidate in NYC
His proposals rely heavily on developing
universal Wi-Fi and wiring the subways for cell phones. He looks to the
model of open source as a way for the citizenry to identify, report and fix
problems -- for example, he says it's a fine idea if New Yorkers could use
cell-phone cameras to report potholes to the proper authorities. And he
thinks it's a crime that the city's schools have to schedule students to
visit the computers instead of offering them -- and their parents and
teachers -- an internet connection 24/7, just like Fortune 500 companies do
with their employees, customers and suppliers.
Adam L. Penenberg. "The Techno Candidate," Wired News, May 5,
2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67427,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_4
From National Public Radio: You can
listen to the answers
Why should you avoid using the word "spacious"
if you're trying to sell your house? What does Paul Feldman's bagel delivery
business teach us about corporate corruption? Is there a way to bet on the
horses and consistently win? Economist Steven Levitt shares some
unconventional insight from his book, Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist
Explores the Hidden Side of Everything.
NPR ---
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4625392
Also see "Cracking the Real Estate Code,"
by Steven Levitt ---
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.05/realestate.html?tw=wn_tophead_5
Fraud Hits Small Businesses the Hardest
According to the Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners, the most costly abuses occur in organizations with fewer than 100
employees. In its 2004 Report to the Nation on Occupational Fraud and Abuse,
the association reports that the average organization loses about 6 percent
of its total annual revenue to fraud and abuse committed by its own
employees. Take the case of Lorain National Bank in Ohio, where federal
prosecutors have indicted a longtime accounting employee for allegedly
taking more than $240,000, according to the Morning Journal newspaper of
Lorain. Apparently acting alone, Mary Scaff of Vermilion is accused of
taking $159,888 in deposits, intended for a bank customer's account, and
diverting them to her own use. She also allegedly took $83,000 that was
supposed to be used to pay postal expenses. ''Instead of paying for postage
with these cashier's checks, the defendant wrote her own Visa account number
on each check and mailed them as payments on her own personal account,'' the
indictment said.
"Fraud Hits Small Businesses the Hardest," AccountingWeb, April 29,
2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100852
Jensen Comment: You can learn a great deal about fraud from the Association
of Certified Fraud Examiners ---
http://www.cfenet.com/splash/
Bob Jensen's threads on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
Tips on aging wine at home:
Watch your ullage
One of the big challenges for red-wine drinkers
is letting bottles age -- but not so much that they spoil. Daniel Duckhorn,
president of Duckhorn winery in Napa Valley, checks the ullage, or air space
between the bottom of the cork and the wine. Ullage increases as wines age;
he opens the wine before the ullage drops below the bottle's neck. To
preserve half-drunken bottles, some oenophiles use air pumps. But Mr.
Duckhorn, who has been making wine for 25 years, prefers another method: He
pours the remaining wine into a smaller bottle -- any bottle will do --
filling it right to the top. He puts a cap on it and sticks it in the
refrigerator, which gives the wine a few extra days of life.
Joshua Lipton, "Winemaker's Bottle Tips," The Wall Street Journal,
May 4, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111516937377624053,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Will it finally be goodbye
to your incomprehensible phone bills?
More recently, Internet phone
technology - also known as voice over Internet protocol, or
VoIP
- made inroads into businesses using heavy-duty equipment
from companies like
Cisco.Now, thanks to providers
like Vonage and others, it has found its way into the home.
The service is sometimes choppy, but costs are low and
quality is satisfactory for routine calls. Moreover,
Internet protocol lends itself to inexpensive
videoconferencing as well, useful for informal video chats
between friends or business associates.For those with
high-speed connections, Internet calling and
videoconferencing are finally taking off. And as their use
grows, so does the selection of tools. The latest Apple
operating system, released last week, incorporates improved
tools for online video chatting. And this week a new
offering from
Motorola, the Ojo, offers
Internet picture-phone ability without a computer.
Daniel Terdiman, "Internet Phones Arrive at Home (and Some
Need No Computer)," The New York Times, May 5, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTMay5
Here's one downside of
Internet telephones (VoIP) I just bet you never thought
about
The problem? Emergency 911 services
are based on land-line technology that tells dispatchers
where you're calling from, but VoIP technology is
essentially blind to your geographical location and has to
jump through hoops to find your local emergency grid. (For
similar reasons, new wireless phones are required to have
GPS locators in them.) This first made national headlines
last month when the Houston Chronicle reported the case of
city resident Joyce John, who tried and failed to get 911 on
Vonage when two men shot her parents in an apparent home
invasion. That case prompted a lawsuit from Texas Attorney
General Greg Abbott (R).
Robert MacMillen, "VoIP Users Taking 911 Off the Map,"
Washington Post, March 5, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/05/AR2005050500588.html?referrer=email
|
|
Did the Chinese beat Columbus to
America? Should our annual holiday be changed to Zheng Day?
Few history theories stir as much controversy
as Gavin Menzies' idea that a legendary Chinese admiral discovered America,
seven decades before European explorer Christopher Columbus. Menzies, author
of the bestseller 1421: the Year China Discovered America, says Admiral
Zheng He led a fleet of 30,000 men on board 300 ships to the American
continent in the 15th century to expand China's influence during the Ming
dynasty. Zheng, says Menzies, drew up maps later used by Columbus to reach
America in 1492 while searching for a new route to India. Portuguese
explorer Ferdinand Magellan also sailed with the help of Chinese-drawn maps
in the 16th century, he adds.
"Did the Chinese discover America?" Aljazeera, May 4, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E3AF58DB-9CAF-4F5F-81CD-1ED1BC8ECEBA.htm
Two new novels about China ---
http://www.newyorker.com/critics/books/articles/050509crbo_books
More harm than good in war on malaria?
About 350 million to 500 million people in more
than 100 countries each year catch the disease, which can kill in hours, the
World Health Organisation (WHO) and UN Children's Fund (Unicef) said in
Tuesday's World Malaria Report 2005. Billed as the first global report, it
follows a scathing editorial in The Lancet medical journal last month
accusing an international partnership of more than 90 organisations and
countries of failing to control malaria, saying they might have done more
harm than good.
"Malaria fight faces hurdles in Africa," Aljazeera, May 4, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/56E8F8AC-D466-4DF1-B7A9-65533F7367EA.htm
Walt Mossberg's tips on photo album
viewing in "books"
Of course you can easily view your pictures in a
slide show on a computer screen, or even on some iPod models. But for those
who miss the feel of the old photo albums, there's a software product that
aims to be the digital equivalent: FlipAlbum 6 Suite, by E-Book Systems.
This $70 program offers a way to organize your photos into digital albums
that look like actual books, with three-dimensional flipping pages and
page-shuffling sound effects to accompany each flip. These albums can
display your photos in various layouts, with annotations below each image,
and you can set music to play along with your pictures. You can post your
finished albums to the Web, email links to the Web site, or burn them to CD
or DVD. My assistant Katie Boehret and I tested this software and found it
to be a rather simple way to create attractive albums filled with digital
photos. But the options for sharing your photo album, especially by burning
it to a disc, were clumsy, limited and a little too techie for normal users.
Katie used the software's three-step FlipAlbum Wizard to start her first
album, which contained photos from a summer vacation with friends. This
wizard instructed her to open the folder or album containing the photos that
she wanted to use, and then to choose a page layout. She chose to show
single photos on each page; the only other option the wizard offers is to
display one image across both pages, centerfold-style. In step three, Katie
chose "Vacation-Travel" as the book's theme from a list of 21 options --
including "Baby-Boy," "Family Moments" and "Dog" -- that dictate the "cover"
design and certain organizational features.
Walter Mossberg, "Flipping Through a Virtual Photo Album: Software Lets
Users Create Electronic Scrapbooks; Tweaking the Page Layouts," The Wall
Street Journal, May 4, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111515635058923702,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Consumer Reports discloses reversed crash
test ratings on some automobiles
Consumer Reports, whose auto ratings influence
vehicle sales and resale prices, reinstated its recommendations on seven
models it had pulled two months ago, and is changing the way it rates cars.
The magazine, published by the nonprofit Consumers Union, will add a second
level to how it recommends vehicles based solely on how they perform in
crash tests conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the
research arm of auto insurers. Two months ago, the magazine reversed itself
on seven vehicles that it had just recommended in the annual April auto
issue that was about to hit newsstands. The reason: side-impact crash test
results from the Insurance Institute that came out the same weekend that
Consumer Reports was releasing its new car recommendations. Of the 16 small
cars tested in the institute's new round of tests, 14 of them failed,
scoring the lowest "poor" rating.
Karen Lundegaard, "Consumer Reports Reinstates Recommendations It Had
Pulled," The Wall Street Journal, May 4, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111516363840923900,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
One of the main reasons Bob
Jensen chose to specialize in accounting for derivatives
Derivatives: Potential Benefits and Risk-Management
Challenges
Perhaps the clearest evidence of the perceived
benefits that derivatives have provided is their continued spectacular
growth. As a consequence of the increasing demand for these products, the
size of the global OTC derivatives markets, according to the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS), reached a notional principal value of $220
trillion in June 2004. Indeed, the growth rate of the OTC markets was more
rapid in 2001-04 than over the previous three years. At the same time, the
growth rate of exchange-traded derivatives exceeded the growth rate of OTC
derivatives over 2001-04. Throughout the 1990s, the Chicago futures and
options exchanges debated whether the growth of the OTC markets was good or
bad for their markets. The data seem to have resolved that debate. In the
United States, the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 has permitted
healthy competition between the exchanges and the OTC markets, and both sets
of markets are reaping the benefits. The benefits are not limited to those
that use derivatives. The use of a growing array of derivatives and the
related application of more-sophisticated approaches to measuring and
managing risk are key factors underpinning the greater resilience of our
largest financial institutions, which was so evident during the credit cycle
of 2001-02 and which seems to have persisted. Derivatives have permitted the
unbundling of financial risks. Because risks can be unbundled, individual
financial instruments now can be analyzed in terms of their common
underlying risk factors, and risks can be managed on a portfolio basis.
Partly because of the proposed Basel II capital requirements, the
sophisticated risk-management approaches that derivatives have facilitated
are being employed more widely and systematically in the banking and
financial services industries.
"Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan Risk Transfer and Financial Stability To
the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago's Forty-first Annual Conference on Bank
Structure, Chicago, Illinois," May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2005/20050505/
Bob Jensen's multimedia
tutorials on how to accounting for derivative financial instruments are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
The rules for accounting for derivatives are
a mess. Much rework needs to be done, especially in accounting for macro
hedges.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan issued a fresh call on Thursday for
Congress to limit the multibillion-dollar holdings of the mortgage giants
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, warning that their huge debt could hurt U.S.
financial markets.
"Greenspan Warns on Fannie and Freddie Again." The New York Times,
May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Greenspan.html
I hesitated to ask what
human behavior one might look for in a mouse (then I thought of
Stuart Little)
In January, an informal ethics committee at
Stanford University endorsed a proposal to create mice with brains nearly
completely made of human brain cells. Stem cell scientist Irving Weissman
said his experiment could provide unparalleled insight into how the human
brain develops and how degenerative brain diseases like Parkinson's
progress. Stanford law professor Hank Greely, who chaired the ethics
committee, said the board was satisfied that the size and shape of the mouse
brain would prevent the human cells from creating any traits of humanity.
Just in case, Greely said, the committee recommended closely monitoring the
mice's behavior and immediately killing any that display human-like
behavior.
Opinion Journal, May 2, 2005
An appellate court struck
down FCC rules that require makers of TV sets to equip them with a
"broadcast flag," technology that prevents digital signals from being
copied more than one time.For more information, see:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111539047987326903,00.html
Unless the Supreme Court
decides otherwise, this negates the following module:
You need to know this: How will
"being flagged" possibly change your life?
Aiming to prevent mass piracy of digital TV
programs, especially over the Internet, the Federal Communications
Commission has mandated a new copy-protection scheme called the "broadcast
flag." The FCC's ruling, which goes into effect this July, lets you make a
backup copy of flagged shows, but no further copies. The flag will be
attached to "over the air" digital content--both network and local station
programs, such as movies or prime-time series on NBC. Any device with a
digital TV tuner can grab that content, whether it comes over an antenna or
through a cable or satellite set-top box. The flag, basically a piece of
code, will travel with any show that the broadcaster wants to protect.
"TV Limits Copies The FCC's new broadcast flag will restrict your ability to
copy and share your favorite digital television shows and movies" PC
World, June 2005 ---
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,120654,00.asp
Which welfare state will be the first to
buckle under the strain of the pension and medical costs?
Who knew? Speculation about which welfare state
will be the first to buckle under the strain of the pension and medical
costs of aging populations usually focuses on European nations with
declining birth rates and aging populations. Who knew the first to buckle
would be General Motors, with Ford not far behind? GM is a car and truck
company -- for the 74th consecutive year, the world's largest -- and has
revenues greater than Arizona's gross state product. But GM's stock price is
down 45% since a year ago; its market capitalization is smaller than Harley
Davidson's. This is partly because GM is a welfare state. In 2003 GM's
pension fund needed an infusion from the largest corporate debt offering in
history. And the cost of providing health coverage for 1.1 million GM
workers, retirees and dependents is estimated to be $5.6 billion this year.
Their coverage is enviable -- at most, small co-payments for visits to
doctors and for pharmaceuticals, but no deductibles or monthly premiums. GM
says health expenditures -- $1,525 per car produced; there is more health
care than steel in a GM vehicle's price tag -- are one of the main reasons
it lost $1.1 billion in the first quarter of 2005. Ford's profits fell 38%,
and although Ford had forecast 2005 profits of $1.4 billion to $1.7 billion,
it now probably will have a year's loss of $100 million to $200 million. All
this while Toyota's sales are up 23% this year and Americans are buying cars
and light trucks at a rate that would produce 2005 sales almost equal to the
record of 17.4 million in 2000.
George Will, "GM Unwound, The Wall Street Journal, May 2, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111498863523021695,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
You can read a Wharton School take ("Car
Trouble: Should We Recall the U.S. Auto Industry?") on this at
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewArticle&id=1183
Do you suppose taxpayers will also have
to pick up GM's pension expenses?
Doomsday precedent: Give workers retirement plans and then pawn them off
for taxpayers to pay the pensions. Passing along these kinds of
entitlements to taxpayers is another nail in the coffin of the United
States.
"UAL (that's United Airlines) Reaches Pact
To Hand Over Pensions to U.S.," by Susan Carey, The Wall Street Journal,
April 25, 2005; Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111419401664114663,00.html
Which major food industry
will be the next to cave in due to environmental mismanagement?
New talks begin in Canada this week aimed at
rescuing the world's fragile fish stocks. The simplest solution is tougher
rules limiting fishing—but politicians have a way of caving to fishing
lobbies.
"The tragedy of the commons, contd," The Economist, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3930586
And we thought Yao Ming
(Houston Rockets) was big: Adultery with a ten-foot tall
woman
Meng Zhaoguo, a rural worker from
northeast China's Wuchang city, says he was 29 years old
when he broke his marital vows for the first and only time
-- with a female extraterrestrial of unusually robust build.
"She was three meters (10 feet) tall and had six fingers,
but otherwise she looked completely like a human," he says
of his close encounter with an alien species. "I told my
wife all about it afterwards. She wasn't too angry." While
few Chinese claim to have managed to get quite as intimate
with an extraterrestrial as Meng, a growing number of people
in the world's most populous nation believe in unidentified
flying objects, or UFOs.
"Close encounters on rise as UFOs seize imagination of
Chinese," Yahoo News, May 3, 2005 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050503/lf_afp/chinaufos_050503140800
The new writing tests that
have been added to both the SAT and the ACT
A. Are unlikely to predict success in college
writing.
B. Will send high school writing instruction in the
wrong direction.
C. Reward those who write “conventional truisms and
platitudes about life.”
D. All of the above.
Answer according to the National Council of Teachers of
English, the answer is D. The council released an
analysis of the new writing tests Tuesday, and it found
little to like and much to dislike ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/04/writing
Every college is a success
if there are enough criteria in the performance measurement system
In response to this political pressure, and to
accommodate the many different kinds, types and characteristics of
institutions, the accountability system usually ends up with 20, 30 or more
accountability measures. No institution will do well on all of them, and
every institution will do well on many of them, so in the end, all
institutions will qualify as reasonably effective to very effective, and all
will remain funded more or less as before. The lifecycle of this process is
quite long and provides considerable opportunity for impassioned rhetoric
about how well individual institutions serve their students and communities,
how effective the research programs are in enhancing economic development,
how valuable the public service activities enhance the state, and so on. At
the end, when most participants have exhausted their energy and rhetoric,
and when the accountability system has achieved stasis, everyone will
declare a victory and the accountability impulse will go dormant for several
years until rediscovered again.
John V. Lombardi, "Accountability, Improvement and Money," Inside Higher
Ed, May 3, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/03/lombardi
Male Bashing
It's not surprising that male-bashing, that popular
sport encouraged by everyone from outraged-at-the-president-of-Harvard
audiences to Madison Avenue ad shops, has wormed its way down to the
pre-pubescent/early-teen demographic ("Moving On: Girl Power as Boy
Bashing," Personal Journal, April 21). What is surprising is the complete
lack of outrage from men. As I was subjected to another in the endless
string of men-as-complete-idiots television ads the other night, I commented
to my wife that if an ad were similarly insulting to women, the hue and cry
from the women's rights bunch would be deafening. As I pointed out, you
never see a "Mom made the bathroom smell" ad. If we did, it would be the end
of civilization as we know it.
Whit Sibley, "American Men Just Shrug as They Take a Bashing," The Wall
Street Journal, May 4, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111517864309724232,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Similar
concerns were raised in Australia
Crotch shot has blokes fuming at sexist ads. A bureau statistician, Neale
Apps, was at a loss to explain why Australian men had finally found their
voice. "I can only think that they are no longer embarrassed about
complaining," he said. Mr Apps noted that some ads attracted twice as many
complaints from men as women.
Julian Lee, Sydney Morning Herald, January 3, 2004 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/01/02/1104601243209.html
Also see
similar criticisms of U.S. television and newspaper bias against men.
The New York Times
has been "breeding contempt for men" ---
http://mensnewsdaily.com/archive/r/roberts/03/roberts062103.htm
A controversial book by
Warren Farrell entitled Why Men Earn More uses government wage data
to show that the " pay gap” has become an ideological myth. His latest
controversial book is called The Myth of Male Power ---
http://snipurl.com/MythOfMalePower
Life in the Fast
Lane of Auditing
"Take This Job and ...
File It: Burdened by Extra Work Created By the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, CPAs
Leave the Big Four for Better Life," by Diya Gullapalli, The Wall Street
Journal, May 4, 2005; Page C1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111517138376224101,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
The Big Four accounting
firms also face extra work created by the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley
securities-overhaul act, passed in the wake of the blowups at Enron
Corp. and WorldCom (now MCI Inc.). At the same time, the pressure to get
the job done right also comes from within: Faced with mounting
litigation from the accounting debacles of earlier this decade, the Big
Four can't afford many more mistakes.
Junior auditors, with
three to five years' experience, long have done much of the grunt work
in auditing publicly traded companies. They have always had the highest
turnover at accounting firms -- as many as one in four quits annually at
PricewaterhouseCoopers, according to a recent study it commissioned.
Overall, nearly one in five accountants at large CPA firms left in 2003,
up from 17% in 2002, according to the American Institute of Certified
Public Accountants. The AICPA expects that trend to continue this year.
To combat the problem,
the Big Four are trying to move from a culture of overloading and
underpaying youngsters to nurturing and better rewarding them.
They are hiring larger
numbers of them, and offering bigger bonuses, more vacation and special
referral fees. Ernst & Young LLP has started a concierge service to make
restaurant reservations and pick up dry cleaning. Deloitte & Touche LLP
holds "town hall meetings" to let junior employees vent gripes to senior
partners. The big firms are more aggressive in dropping or turning down
business, to hold down the workload, and they are pulling older staff
from other departments, like tax-services, to help out.
"The profession has
recognized that we have a lot of stress in the system, and we're doing a
lot of things to execute against that," says Bob Moritz, a senior
partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers.
"Does this model still
work?" asks Jim Walsh, a human-resources managing director for the firm.
"It's a good question" that is under review there.
College does not prepare for real life
Perhaps we should stop and consider that a
four-year college right out of high school isn't the right choice for
everyone. Perhaps college isn't the place to "find yourself", especially to
the tune of over 15 grand a year. A third of college students do not qualify
for a degree in six years and just because you don't graduate, doesn't mean
you don't have to pay back student loans. Since when is a college degree all
that counts in the job market? The U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics'
estimates of the fastest-growing occupations between 2002 and 2012 show that
six of the top 10 don't require bachelor's degrees. On the job training,
vocational and technical degrees can lead to successful careers. Let's face
it, for many occupations, a year of on the job training would prepare you
much better then wading through philosophy, ethnic studies, astronomy and
all those other gen eds that bog down students and stretch out our education
to four years and beyond. Admittedly, much of the college education process
is a product of our societal conceptions of what determines success and job
preparedness. It is also a great ploy by the universities to reel in those
middle class baby boomer dollars by convincing mom and dad that a pricey
degree is the only thing separating their baby from comfy suburban bliss and
destitution.
Amanda Hooper, "College does not prepare for real life," Bowling Green
News, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.bgnews.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/05/02/4277e59318ec9
Monumental documentary the
People's Century that spans 26 parts
People's Century is a monumental documentary series describing the 20th
century. It was first shown on the BBC in 1999. It is a 26 part documentary
each spanning one hour dealing with the major socio-economic, political
climate and cultural movements that shaped the 20th century ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People%27s_Century
Bob Jensen's history bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
A million here, a million
there: In college athletics it's real cash
While critics of big-time sports might look at
the growing subsidies and see a runaway train, the NCAA’s president, Myles
Brand, put a positive spin on the finding that colleges increased what they
spent to subsidize sports programs. “Leaders at our member institutions
determine the value athletics brings to their campus communities and fund it
accordingly,” Brand said in a
news release accompanying the report
Doug Lederman, "Sports, Spending and Subsidies," Inside Higher Ed,
May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/04/ncaa
A billion here, a billion
there: In accounting it is sometimes only on paper and not real cash
The American International Group, the embattled
insurance giant, said last night that an in-depth examination of its
operations had turned up additional accounting improprieties going back to
2000 that would reduce its net worth by $2.7 billion, or $1 billion more
than it had previously estimated.
Gretchen Morgenson, "Giant Insurer Finds $1 Billion More in Flaws, The
New York Times, May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/02/business/02aig.html?
Also see the NYT article ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/02/business/02aig.html
Bob Jensen's updates on fraud in general are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's updates on fraud in the insurance industry are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
May 2, 2005 message from the
former Chairman of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (Dennis
Beresford)
Bob
If you haven't seen it already, today's Wall
Street Journal includes an article about AIG's further accounting
issues. Included is a link to the Company's statement on all of the
various issues they have identified so far:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111501332683321968,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us
Some of the new problems
identified relate to accounting for derivatives. It appears, among other
things, that the Company now believes it did not meet the criteria for
hedge accounting and will have to record a $2.4 billion gain in income
rather than deferring the effect. Of course, that will lead to an
offsetting effect in a later year when the "hedged item" occurs.
Following in the
footsteps of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, AIG's statement about
derivatives makes me wonder how many other large, complicated companies
would find deficiencies in their accounting for derivatives if they were
forced to have a critical outsider challenge what they are doing.
Denny
May 2, 2005 reply from Bob
Jensen
Hi Denny,
I did catch this one. What still gets to
me is the fact that many of the fluctuations in the value of derivatives
that don't qualify for hedge accounting (usually due to macro hedging)
really are never realized in fluctuations in cash flows. I tend to
sympathize with Fannie on this and hope that the FASB will eventually
revise the standard on macro hedging.
Thanks,
Bob
What do we have auditors
for?
Still, "at a certain point, if auditors can only
find out about [improper accounting] if
management tells them about it, then what do we have auditors for?" said
Lynn E. Turner, a former SEC chief accountant and managing director of
research for proxy-advisory concern Glass Lewis & Co. "The reason we have
auditors is to give investors confidence that an outside third party has
looked at them and found things that might turn out to be big errors."
Theo Francis and Diya Gullapalli, "Pricewaterhouse's Squeeze Play: AIG Says
It Misled Auditor, As Greenberg Cites Review Clearing Internal Controls,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 3, 2005, Page C3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111508622792022942,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#PwC
Here's another example of
how to mislead with statistics
"One measure of how children have tumbled as a
priority in America is that in 1960 we ranked 12th in infant mortality among
nations in the world, while now 40 nations have infant mortality rates
better than ours or equal to it," writes Nicholas Kristof in yesterday's New
York Times. We explained in January
http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110006153 why these numbers are
meaningless: In brief, American physicians make heroic efforts to save
low-birthweight and premature babies, whom other countries don't even count
as having been born.
Opinion Journal, May 2, 2005
Desk-top fusion may be
possible after all
Physicists who meddle with cold fusion, like
psychologists who dabble in the paranormal, are likely to be labelled quacks
by their peers. This is due to an infamous incident in 1989 when Stanley
Pons and Martin Fleischmann held a press conference to announce their
discovery of nuclear fusion in what amounted to a test-tube full of water
connected to a battery. In particular, they said that they were getting more
energy out of the process than they put into it. Their result was instantly
dubbed “cold fusion”, to contrast it with giant fusion-reactor experiments
that attempt to reproduce the ultra-high temperatures found inside the sun.
But when it failed to stand up to scrutiny, confusion—and eventually
outrage—ensued. In 2002, history repeated itself as farce with the
announcement by a group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee of
fusion inside the bubbles that are produced by ultrasonic waves travelling
through a liquid. This result passed the peer-review process, but was
immediately attacked by another group—from the same laboratory—which claimed
to find no such effect. There was a counterclaim by yet a third team last
year, and a final verdict on “bubble fusion” is still not in. But most
people have lost interest in the debate, assuming that anyone claiming to
have observed fusion in a desktop experiment is a crank or a fraud. This
attitude, however, may yet turn out to be mistaken. Desk-top fusion may be
possible after all, according to an article published in this week's Nature
by three researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
Brian Naranjo, Jim Gimzewski and Seth Putterman have been meticulous in
their experiment, and in particular in their measurement of one of the
tell-tales of nuclear fusion, the production of neutrons. Their results have
been peer-reviewed, and they make no wild claims of surplus energy being
produced. Given past excesses, such caution is understandable. And it may
indeed be the case that their technique, which involves banging together the
nuclei of deuterium atoms (a heavy form of hydrogen) using a tiny crystal in
a palm-sized vacuum chamber, will never provide a source of power. It could
have some interesting applications, nonetheless.
"Honest!" The Economist, April 28, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3909490
It was the largest fine ever
imposed on an auditing firm
Deloitte & Touche LLP incurred the wrath of federal
regulators Tuesday over public statements that appeared to shift the blame
away from the auditing firm for failed audits of Adelphia Communications
Corp. and Just for Feet Inc. Deborah Harrington, a Deloitte spokeswoman,
said regulators requested that the firm revise the first press release it
put out. The second release omitted some disputed statements. Deloitte, the
U.S. accounting branch of Big Four accounting firm Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu,
Tuesday agreed to pay $50 million to settle charges by the Securities and
Exchange Commission that it failed to detect fraud at Adelphia. It was the
largest fine ever imposed on an auditing firm.
"SEC Rebukes Deloitte on Adelphia Audit Spin," SmartPros, April 28,
2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x48015.xml
The largest bankruptcy case in the
history of the world
Question What CPA auditing firm has the dubious honor of having been the
auditor for the company that is now designated as the largest bankruptcy
case in the history of the world?
Answer Deloitte Touche Tomatsu
Deloitte faces a potential $2 billion legal claim over audits of Forest Re,
an aviation reinsurer that failed after 2001's terror attacks.
Bob Jensen's threads on Deloitte's legal
woes are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Deloitte
Enhance your
PowerPoint shows
From the T.H.E. Newsletter on May 4, 2005
CrystalGraphics Inc., a developer and publisher of add-on products for
Microsoft Office, has released PowerPlugs: Video Backgrounds Player and
PowerPlugs: Video Backgrounds Content . The Video Backgrounds Player is
a unique software product that plugs directly into Microsoft PowerPoint
allowing users to select and insert full-screen moving backgrounds into
their presentations quickly and effortlessly. It is also compatible with
all of PowerPoint's animation tools and text-editing capabilities. Video
Backgrounds Content is the perfect complement to the Video Backgrounds
Player software. It features nine volumes that each include 25 unique
background video clips optimized for use with PowerPoint so they can
play back smoothly in real time on most Pentium III or higher PCs. The
footage is royalty free, so you can use it as many times as you like in
your presentations with no added cost.
For more, visit
http://www.crystalgraphics.com
Bob Jensen's threads on
resources are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/newfaculty.htm#Resources
A New Photoshop
Makes Retouching Reality (Somewhat) Easier
Adobe Photoshop, of course, is the world's most
popular photo-editing software (for Mac and Windows). Every time a magazine
pastes a movie star's head onto a different body for its cover, you can bet
that Photoshop was involved. Such digital manipulation is so common that
"Photoshop" has become a verb: "My ex-husband was on that trip, too, but
I've Photoshopped him out of this shot." But even when no movie stars are
decapitated, Photoshop's magic is at work all around you. Photoshop
color-corrects, brightens, darkens, crops, sharpens or airbrushes
imperfections from a huge percentage of the photographs you see every day,
whether in ads, articles, movies or CD's, on Web sites or the covers of
books. No wonder, then, that when Adobe releases a new version, as it did
last week, photographers and designers sit up and take notice.
David Pogue, "A New Photoshop Makes Retouching Reality (Somewhat) Easier,"
The New York Times, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/05/technology/circuits/05pogue.html?
Real Networks' Rhapsody 3.0
In addition to a new user interface, the ability to
manage music stored on your hard drive, and an offer that gives new
subscribers 25 free streams per month, Rhapsody also boasts an important
feature: subscription portability. This allows Rhapsody users (those willing
to pay $15 per month, as opposed to the basic $10 per month fee) to move as
many of the more than 1,000,000 subscription songs to their digital music
players as will fit. But not every digital music device will play Rhapsody
To Go music. In fact, very few will. In the best of circumstances,
explaining this key fact to subscribers is a difficult task. When
subscribers are angry and feel misled, the difficulty is compounded.
Already, Real is facing a backlash on its message boards from angry
consumers who believed the "To Go" plan meant they could port songs to their
iPods -- something that is not allowed. Consumers were confused, it seems,
by the fact that non-subscription downloads purchased from Rhapsody can be
played on iPods, whereas subscription-based streaming songs cannot be moved
to iPods.
Eric Hellweg, "You Can (Almost) Take it With," MIT's Technology Review,
May 2, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_050205hellweg.asp
From Jim Mahar's blog
Transfer Pricing A cool
article on transfer pricing--no it is not an oxymoron!
Reichelstein, Baldenius,
and Melumad look at transfer prices and remind us that transfer pricing,
the price that firms charge for internal "purchases", is a balancing act
between tax reduction strategies, internal controls, and incentives.
“What most people think
about is transfer pricing as a tax optimization issue,” Reichelstein
says. “Yet, transfer prices are management tools. They have an important
function to facilitate decision-making, to tell certain regional or
country managers what the value or price of some intermediate product is
and use that information to maximize the profit of the company as a
whole. That is the economic function of transfer pricing.”"
"The separate worlds of
tax folk and management planning types “even splits the accountants,” he
notes, and creates separate industries. “The tax accountants look on
pricing as entirely a compliance issue,” he says. Meanwhile, management
accounting consultants are preoccupied with transfer prices for both
internal allocations and public reporting purposes." Very interesting!
However, I am a bit less convinced that a weighted average solution is
optimal, but hey, that is rather insignificant in the big picture.
Thanks to MBA Depot for
pointing this one out to me!
A Stanford University GSB alumni review
is provided at
http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/bmag/sbsm0502/research_reichelstein_accounting.shtml
Wikipedia is a real-life Hitchhiker's Guide
It's too bad Douglas Adams
wasn't able to see his vision brought to life. I don't
mean the so-so
movie version
of The Hitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy. I'm talking about
Wikipedia, the Web's own
don't-panic guide to everything. The parallels between
The Hitchhiker's Guide (as found in
Adams' original
BBC radio series and
novels) and Wikipedia are
so striking, it's a wonder that the author's rabid fans
don't think he invented time travel. Since its editor
was perennially out to lunch, the Guide
was amended "by any passing stranger who happened to
wander into the empty offices on an afternoon and saw
something worth doing." This anonymous group effort ends
up outselling Encyclopedia Galactica
even though "it has many omissions and contains much
that is apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate."
Paul Boutin, "Wikipedia is a real-life Hitchhiker's
Guide: huge, nerdy, and imprecise," Slate, May 3, 2005
---
http://slate.msn.com/id/2117942
The link to Wikipedia is
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page |
|
Ivory-billed Woodpecker
Those of you that were thrilled to learn that the ivory-billed woodpecker
really is not extinct (as was previously thought) may want to learn more
about this rare bird at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivory-billed_Woodpecker
Also note the new entry for the Iceland
Hotspot ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iceland_hotspot
Give us your best or give us your poor
and minorities, that is the question big state universities face
Since he was hired to lead the University of
Massachusetts flagship campus three years ago, John V. Lombardi has been
busy laying plans to improve the university. He has expanded private
fund-raising and plans to rebuild much of the campus. By boosting
recruitment, he has increased the applicant pool by nearly 25 percent in
hope of attracting more high-achieving students . . . Convinced they must
act now or watch their public university drift from its mission, Bustamante
and a small, tight-knit group of student leaders have launched a formal
campaign, Take Back UMass, to ''return UMass to its legacy as an accessible
and diverse public university," according to the group's website. This year,
instead of working with administrators as is typical on many campuses, the
UMass student government has staged a half-dozen noisy demonstrations to
demand more diversity on campus and more support for minority students.
Minority enrollment, which peaked in the mid-1990s, dropped off at the end
of the decade and has been mostly flat since then. Students have blitzed
legislators with angry letters and phone calls, and they organized a boycott
of classes last month to protest a restructuring of student services.
Jenna Russell, "Students say UMass being too selective Goals at Amherst spur
strong debate," Boston Globe, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2005/05/05/students_say_umass_being_too_selective?pg=full
Australian Resolve
In Australia's case, the situation is made even
worse by the antics of freed Italian hostage Giuliana Sgrena. Ms. Sgrena,
its worth recalling, is the left-wing journalist who sympathized with her
kidnappers. She also lied about the speed of the car she was traveling in
when American soldiers opened fire as it sped toward a nighttime roadblock,
accidentally killing an Italian secret service officer accompanying her. Now
Ms. Sgrena is doing the terrorist's dirty work again, urging ordinary
Australians to respond to the Wood kidnapping by launching a campaign to
bring their forces home from Iraq. But Australians seem to be made of
sterner stuff. While some Filipinos protested to pressure Ms. Arroyo into
giving way last summer, Australians don't appear to be following that
example, or Ms. Sgrena's advice. In a general election seven months ago,
they decisively rejected the troops-out option then championed by the
opposition Labor Party, instead returning the government of Prime Minister
John Howard with an increased majority. During the present crisis, not even
Labor, now under the leadership of experienced statesman Kim Beazley, is
advocating bringing the troops home or paying a ransom.
"Australian Resolve," The Wall Street Journal, May 5, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111524301805925011,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
No more "best" students: Many more
seniors to get top honors
Over the years, Saratoga High School has tried
to curb its competitive culture. The school does not publish an honor roll.
It has slashed homework over breaks. It releases grade-point averages to
students only on request. Yet, teachers say, too many students remain
obsessed with their grades. So in another attempt to ease the pressure,
Saratoga High announced it would change the way it chooses class
valedictorians and salutatorians to allow more students to be honored. The
announcement kicked off a furor in this affluent, well-educated community,
with many fearful the school's highest achievers would be robbed of their
due.
"Saratoga High trying to ease grade pressure (Educrat dumbing-down education
alert!), San Jose Mercury News, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1396543/posts
How bad must it get before Germany gets a
wake up call?
Franz Müntefering, chairman of the Social
Democratic Party, stoked resentments in a bitter attack on private investors
in German companies . . . German industrialists, academics and other
politicians have roundly criticized Mr. Müntefering's attack, which seems
calculated to shore up the leftist base of the Social Democrats before a
crucial election on May 22 in North Rhine-Westphalia, a large and an
economically troubled state. A prominent German-Jewish historian, Michael
Wolffsohn, even detected a whiff of anti-Jewish sentiment in the list, which
also included Blackstone, the New York private equity investment group, and
Saban Capital, which is controlled by the Israeli-American billionaire, Haim
Saban. Mr. Schröder has not joined in such attacks, and Social Democratic
officials in North Rhine-Westphalia said it made no sense to put Wincor
Nixdorf on a list of supposed victims.
Mark Landler, "Report to German Ruling Party Faults Overseas Investors,"
The New York Times, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/05/business/worldbusiness/05private.html
The debate raging
in Germany is about whether the country is quite ready for this kind of
capitalism rather than the more socially oriented Rhineland variety that is
ailing, but not quite buried. Mr Müntefering is clear where he stands: “We
want social market economy, not market economy pure.” But despite the
populist bent to his rhetoric, not everyone supports his stance. Attending a
rally on May 1st he was ritually pelted with eggs by trade unionists who are
supposed to be his friends. Many people have told him in the past three
weeks that what he wants just will not work any more, and that opportunistic
foreign investors, far from being locusts, can be the reformer’s friend.
"Some German politicians want to blame international business and finance,
not themselves, for the country’s sluggish economy," The Economist
---
http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3954817
The explosions came after this
"suspicious item" was eaten
A concerned citizen spotted a male juvenile
carrying a suspiciously concealed item into Marshall Junior High School
early Thursday morning. Police were called. The school was locked down.
Adjacent streets were closed and law officers were perched on roofs with
weapons. The drama ended about two hours later when the suspicious item was
identified: A 30-inch burrito, prepared as an extra-credit assignment and
wrapped inside tinfoil and a white T-shirt. "I didn't know whether to laugh
or cry," school Principal Diana Russell said after the mystery was solved.
Opinion Journal, May 2, 2005
Charles Colson (remember him?)
questions: "Does sex sell?"
The Reuters news service has looked into recent
box-office numbers and come up with some intriguing results: Movies rated R
for explicit sexual content do poorly in theaters. Their report states,
“Last year, five of the top-10-grossing movies were PG. Of the top 25, only
four were rated R. ‘Increasingly, if a movie is rated R,’ says producer John
Goldwyn, ‘audiences won’t go.’” Movies advertised as being all about sex,
like Closer and Kinsey, got great reviews, but they failed miserably at the
box office. And last year was no anomaly. In his book Hollywood vs. America,
Michael Medved tracked poor audience numbers for sexually explicit films all
the way back to the sixties. Based on its own research, Reuters concluded,
“The old adage ‘sex sells’ no longer applies to the movies. . . . As any
theater owner will eagerly tell you, American audiences like their movies PG
and PG-13, not R, and certainly not NC-17.” Yet we need to be careful not to
read too much into these results, because the news isn’t all good. For one
thing, neither PG nor PG-13 means what it used to anymore. There’s a lot
more today that slips past the ratings board than ever before. While
hardcore sex may not be selling, “vulgar, dumb, funny sex,” as Reuters puts
it, is selling just fine, and to ever-younger audiences. Producer Peter
Guber echoed Reuters’s thesis when he explained, “Sex inside a comedy
candy-coats sex and allows the audience to feel comfortable. . . . Films can
be sexy, but they can’t portray the [real] sexual intimacy most people
[genuinely] crave. . . . The portrayal has to be violent or funny.”
Charles Colson, "Does Sex Sell? You Might Be Surprised," Prison Sell,
May 2, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/SexSell
Music:
Hope Has Place (I love this one) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/pity.htm
Train of
Life with Willie
Nelson and Patsy Cline
(I like this one even better) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
All the original Carpenters
(sniff, sniff We've Only Just Begun) ---
http://www.mymusicattic.org/Page19.html
Other great originals and some midis ---
http://www.mymusicattic.org/
Gathering of Nations (Native
American) Music ---
http://www.angelfire.com/al2/gasaguali/GCR.htm
Mr. & Mrs Doo Wop Oldies (original
recordings) ---
http://www.doo-wop.org/doowop_001.htm
Click on Cafe, Drive-In, Sock Hop, etc.
(especially Cruisin and Memorabilia)
Malt Shop Sites ---
http://www.centex.net/~elliott/maltshop.html
Thank you for the sacrifices: This price
of freedom is written in blood
FROM a balcony in Whitehall on May 8, 1945, Winston
Churchill addressed the crowd which filled the street from end to end. "This
is your victory," he cried. "Everyone, man or woman, has done their best …
Neither the long years, nor the dangers, nor the fierce attacks of the enemy
have in any way weakened the independent resolve of the British nation. God
bless you all." Some in the crowd shouted back: "No, this is your victory."
At Trafalgar Square and at Piccadilly Circus, the crowd was dancing and
singing. American soldiers were exulting with British and Commonwealth
servicemen, and the ordinary people of London, to celebrate what five years
earlier had seemed an unattainable outcome. Then, with the Germans bursting
into France and driving all before them into rout, Churchill had stated his
aim to the House of Commons as: "Victory at all costs, victory in spite of
all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be." The road had
been harder than he had feared; 50 million people had died, much of Europe
had been destroyed, millions had been driven from their homes and were
wandering Europe, displaced and starving. The liberators were making
terrible discoveries as they penetrated the frontiers of Germany to find
camps full of sick and emaciated people. Many were dying at the moment they
found freedom, the consequence of the Nazis' terrible policy of racial
purification. In some places the last shots of World War II were still being
fired and soldiers were dying in battle. In Prague, German defenders were
battling against the advancing Russians but also against the Russian
turncoats of the "Vlasov Army" who, hoping to save their skins, had turned
back in the moment of defeat to fight for Russia again.
"VE: very emotional," Sydney Morning Herald, May 7, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/05/06/1115092690852.html
The Russians made huge sacrifices and have
some different memories of World War II ---
http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3941474
Sharing Professor of the Week
Professor Matt Stroud from Trinity University ---
http://www.trinity.edu/mstroud/
Matt Stroud is in our
Department of Modern Languages and Literatures ---
http://www.trinity.edu/departments/modern%5Flanguages/
Matt's Spanish Grammar site is one of the
most frequently sought after Web sites on campus in terms of the number of
hits per day ---
http://www.trinity.edu/mstroud/grammar/
These interactive
Spanish grammar exercises were created using JavaScript and work best
using Microsoft Internet Explorer 3 and Netscape 3 or higher. Some
JavaScript programs created on PC's (as these were) may not work
correctly on Macintosh machines, especially those using early versions
of the browser.
In addition, these
exercises require the use of accents. For information on using the
built-in accents via the US-International keyboard in Windows 95 and 98,
see the following page:
http://www.trinity.edu/mstroud/spanish/accents.html
The Department of Modern Languages and
Literatures also has some great language resource site links at
http://www.trinity.edu/departments/modern_languages/resources.htm
I don't believe in
the self. I don't think that there is such a thing. I think that there are
selves if you want to call them that. There are all sorts of interests and
antipathies within and they all have their own histories and they
congregate, but there is no unity. There is always the effort to say there
is a unity that goes under the name Bill Maidment. That often seems to be a
manipulation and exploitation of you, and you want to say, 'Look! I'm not
coherent, everything does not hang together, and I'm glad!
W.M. (Bill) Maidment, University teacher, 1924-2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/05/06/1115092687979.html
Yahoo Stokes Search Engine Rivalry By
Propelling Video Search
Yahoo Inc., which is racing against Google in offering better video-search
capabilities, brought its service out of beta on Thursday (May 5)
and said it has added searchable content from CBS News, MTV and other media
channels. Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., first launched the service in
December 2004, about a month before Google, Mountain View, Calif., debuted
its TV video search service, which is still in beta. A major difference
between the two services is that Yahoo offers video clips. The Google Video
service, on the other hand, returns still photos and a text excerpt at the
point where the search phrase was spoken. Transcripts are also available.
Yahoo's video-clip offering reflects how the news and entertainment
portal has done a better job at negotiating deals with content
providers, particularly major media and movie companies, Charlene Li,
analyst for Forrester Research, said. This is important because the more
content a search engine can peruse, the more consumers it will attract.
Antone Gonsalves, "Yahoo Stokes Search Engine Rivalry By
Propelling Video Search," InternetWeek, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.internetweek.com/allStories/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=162600311
Jensen Comment: Yahoo's video search site is at
http://video.search.yahoo.com/
Bob Jensen's threads on video searching are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#VideoSearch
Just in from WebMD
New Findings Could Help Point the Way (a blood test) to Autism Diagnosis in
Newborns ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/105/107860.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_03
How to lie with statistics: What states
have the heaviest and lightest tax burdens in the nation?
Residents of Hawaii, Wyoming and Connecticut
shoulder the heaviest state tax burdens in the nation. The least state taxes
per person are paid by those living in Texas, South Dakota or Colorado, U.S.
Census figures for 2004 show. Hawaii topped the list with taxes averaging
$3,048 per person, more than double the per-capita rate in last-place Texas,
which collected $1,367 for every man, woman and child . . . Because the
Census numbers don't include tax levies by local governments, which often
pick up certain state services, economists say a better measure of tax
burdens nationwide is a snapshot of both state and local tax collections.
The main reason Hawaii ranked No. 1 in the Census report is that public
school education, covered largely by local government in other states, is
strictly a state service.
Kathleen Murphy, "Is your state tax-friendly?" Stateline, May 7, 2005
---
http://www.stateline.org/live/ViewPage.action?siteNodeId=136&languageId=1&contentId=28297
Jensen Comment: There are all sorts of problems with this type of data. As
noted above, Texas looks low but Texas has enormous property taxes that are
left out of the data reported above. I'm led to wonder why New Hampshire
and Nevada are not low on the list since neither state has a state income
tax. How in the world could Delaware not be at the bottom? Mysterious
factors are at work. Texas and Nevada have other sources of revenue other
than taxation of residents such as taxation of casinos in Nevada and state
ownership of all the liquor stores in New Hampshire. In other words, the
individual resident may be better off (from the standpoint of taxation) in
Nevada or New Hampshire rather than in Texas or Colorado where sales taxes
and local property taxes take a bigger bite from individuals. The problem
with New Hampshire is the property tax burden, but this varies greatly by
towns within the state, especially since properties are only assessed every
ten years with varying years of when the reassessment takes place. I found
the property taxes to be much less in NH than in Texas where property is
revalued annually. It sure felt nice when I bought my first car in New
Hampshire and did not have to pay a sales tax. But it did not feel nice to
have to pay huge "transfer tax" when I bought a retirement home in New
Hampshire. Purportedly there is no sales tax in NH, but many folks like me
belatedly discover that a real estate "transfer tax" is really a sales tax
by another name. The burden falls roughly half upon the property buyer and
half on the property seller.
And now the rest of the story from MSN
Central ---
http://moneycentral.msn.com/articles/retire/basics/9838.asp
Texas, South Dakota, and Colorado are not at the bottom when property taxes
are added to the data. They are replaced by Delaware, Arkansas, and
Kentucky. And Hawaii, Wyoming and Connecticut are no longer the most taxing
states. They are replaced by the very taxing states of Wisconsin, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Vermont.
Kiplinger's magazine has
developed a retiree's tax map to illustrate the total
tax burden -- income taxes, property taxes and sales
taxes -- for a typical retired couple in each of the 50
states and Washington, D.C. We discovered that when you
look at the big picture, it might be cheaper to stay put
in New York or Illinois than to move to one of the
no-tax "havens." For retirees who are really retired --
that is, who haven't taken on jobs in retirement --
income taxes are often the least of their worries.
A recent advertisement for
retirement homes in Pennsylvania included the
tantalizing enticement that retirement income is not
taxed in the Keystone State. That's true. Pennsylvania,
which has a broad-based state income tax, is one of the
most generous states in the country when it comes to the
tax treatment of retirement income. Social Security
benefits, public and private pensions as well as IRA
distributions are all exempt from state income tax. But
don't pack your bags just yet. When we tabulated the
total state and local tax burden for retirees in all 50
state capitals and Washington, D.C., Harrisburg, Pa.,
proved to be the most taxing city for retirees.
Welcome to the real world,
where property taxes can make homeownership the biggest
burden of all in your golden years. Add to that sales
tax, which you pay as you go about your daily errands,
and you'll start thinking about the tax bogeyman in a
whole new light.
In our example, property taxes
of more than $6,500 on a median-priced home in
Harrisburg (the highest property-tax bill in our survey)
pushed Pennsylvania to the bottom of the list of
tax-friendly places. And that's despite a zero income
tax bill because all of the couple's retirement income
is exempt from Pennsylvania's taxes and their remaining
$5,000 of interest and dividend income falls below tax
thresholds.
You might expect that
Pennsylvania, second only to Florida in its percentage
of residents 65 and older, would cut seniors some slack.
While it does offer a property-tax rebate of up to $500
to some older homeowners, our hypothetical couple's
$60,000 income was too high to qualify.
The retirement tax bite, state
by state
City |
State |
Income tax |
Property
tax |
Home price |
Sales tax |
Total |
Dover |
DE |
$0 |
$543
|
$133,010
|
$0 |
$543
|
Juneau |
AK* |
$0 |
$1,032
|
$240,000
|
$0 |
$1,032
|
Frankfort |
KY |
$0 |
$274
|
$163,160
|
$840
|
$1,114
|
Columbia |
SC |
$0 |
$518
|
$127,730
|
$1,000
|
$1,518
|
Albany |
NY |
$0 |
$912
|
$120,490
|
$1,120
|
$2,032
|
Lansing |
MI |
$0 |
$1,312
|
$116,900
|
$840
|
$2,152
|
Jackson |
MS |
$423
|
$362
|
$113,410
|
$1,400
|
$2,185
|
Cheyenne |
WY* |
$0 |
$1,007
|
$141,680
|
$1,200
|
$2,207
|
Carson City |
NV* |
$0 |
$1,346
|
$165,620
|
$980
|
$2,326
|
Denver |
CO |
$248
|
$1,141
|
$212,240
|
$1,008
|
$2,397
|
Atlanta |
GA |
$66
|
$1,388
|
$162,000
|
$980
|
$2,434
|
Baton Rouge |
LA |
$225
|
$600
|
$129,800
|
$1,680
|
$2,505
|
Boise |
ID |
$399
|
$1,424
|
$145,950
|
$1,000
|
$2,823
|
Richmond |
VA |
$26
|
$1,964
|
$139,270
|
$870
|
$2,860
|
Springfield |
IL |
$0 |
$1,761
|
$86,680
|
$1,105
|
$2,866
|
Sacramento |
CA |
$148
|
$1,669
|
$165,640
|
$1,085
|
$2,902
|
Phoenix |
AZ |
$479
|
$1,309
|
$141,670
|
$1,134
|
$2,922
|
Salem |
OR |
$777
|
$2,160
|
$139,330
|
$0 |
$2,937
|
Indianapolis |
IN |
$1,013
|
$1,236
|
$117,690
|
$700
|
$2,949
|
Honolulu |
HI |
$1,274
|
$939
|
$357,310
|
$800
|
$3,013
|
Montgomery |
AL |
$948
|
$323
|
$125,850
|
$1,800
|
$3,071
|
Salt Lake City |
UT |
$786
|
$1,190
|
$150,340
|
$1,320
|
$3,296
|
Nashville |
TN |
$0 |
$1,666
|
$145,510
|
$1,650
|
$3,316
|
Raleigh |
NC |
$455
|
$1,845
|
$194,380
|
$1,030
|
$3,330
|
Columbus |
OH |
$243
|
$2,300
|
$136,010
|
$805
|
$3,348
|
Oklahoma City |
OK |
$817
|
$900
|
$90,940
|
$1,675
|
$3,392
|
Tallahassee |
FL** |
$160
|
$2,284
|
$131,680
|
$980
|
$3,424
|
Olympia |
WA* |
$0 |
$2,322
|
$156,280
|
$1,120
|
$3,442
|
Austin |
TX |
$0 |
$2,332
|
$152,000
|
$1,155
|
$3,487
|
Boston |
MA |
$872
|
$1,991
|
$260,850
|
$700
|
$3,563
|
Des Moines |
IA |
$461
|
$2,324
|
$123,020
|
$840
|
$3,625
|
Hartford |
CT |
$234
|
$2,561
|
$125,330
|
$840
|
$3,635
|
Pierre |
SD |
$0 |
$2,565
|
$131,750
|
$1,080
|
$3,645
|
Helena |
MT |
$2,339
|
$1,392
|
$145,880
|
$0 |
$3,731
|
Jefferson City |
MO |
$589
|
$2,263
|
$140,860
|
$1,065
|
$3,917
|
Washington |
DC |
$2,119
|
$1,036
|
$245,740
|
$805
|
$3,960
|
St. Paul |
MN |
$1,383
|
$1,608
|
$139,320
|
$980
|
$3,971
|
Topeka |
KS |
$1,114
|
$1,506
|
$91,930
|
$1,360
|
$3,980
|
Charleston |
WV |
$1,661
|
$1,192
|
$104,240
|
$1,200
|
$4,053
|
Santa Fe |
NM |
$897
|
$1,946
|
$329,610
|
$1,288
|
$4,131
|
Lincoln |
NB |
$994
|
$2,345
|
$115,180
|
$910
|
$4,249
|
Bismarck |
ND |
$635
|
$3,194
|
$144,570
|
$840
|
$4,669
|
Providence |
RI |
$1,156
|
$2,831
|
$134,680
|
$980
|
$4,967
|
Augusta |
ME |
$813
|
$3,604
|
$153,490
|
$700
|
$5,117
|
Little Rock |
AR |
$2,241
|
$1,620
|
$117,370
|
$1,325
|
$5,186
|
Concord |
NH |
$0 |
$5,279
|
$193,090
|
$0 |
$5,279
|
Annapolis |
MD |
$1,238
|
$3,483
|
$275,560
|
$1,000
|
$5,395
|
Montpelier |
VT |
$1,057
|
$4,065
|
$124,320
|
$700
|
$5,822
|
Madison |
WI |
$1,320
|
$3,926
|
$159,690
|
$770
|
$6,016
|
Trenton |
NJ |
$87
|
$5,788
|
$148,800
|
$840
|
$6,715
|
Harrisburg |
PA |
$0 |
$6,551
|
$112,330
|
$840
|
$7,391
|
State has no income tax. **Florida has no income tax.
The $160 figure includes an intangibles tax.
Breaks for
retirees
It is
not so much what a state taxes but what it spares from
taxation that makes or breaks a total tax bill for most
retirees. For example, to prevent elderly homeowners
from being forced out of their homes by rising property
taxes, states often provide relief to seniors in the
form of a homestead exemption, a freeze on the
property's value or a deferral of property taxes, says
E. Thomas Wetzel, president of the Retirement Living
Information Center. (See link to its Web site under
"Related Web Sites" at left.) The majority of these
programs are targeted to low-income households. Still,
in Alabama, Alaska, Hawaii, Illinois, Mississippi, New
York, Texas and Washington, D.C., a couple with $60,000
in income qualifies for such a property-tax break
designed specifically for seniors.
In most cities, the local
property tax is determined by multiplying the assessed
value of a home by a property-tax rate. But assessments
in the cities we surveyed ranged from a low of 4% of
market value in Columbia, S.C., to 100% in several
cities. So if you're thinking about relocating, don't
forget to check out the property taxes. In some cases,
redirecting your home search down the street or across
county lines could save you a bundle.
|
|
Jensen Comment: Much depends upon income
level when you are choosing a state to live in. The above data are based
upon relatively low retirement incomes and median-priced homes.
Whatever your property taxes, you are going to get
clobbered harder when there is a state income tax if you have a relatively
high retirement income. I think the state income tax, possibly
coupled with estate taxation, is one of the main reasons higher income
retirees (not me) choose to move to states without income taxes when they
retire. However, many other factors enter into such decisions such as
climate, scenery, lower population density, health care facilities, and
where the children and grandchildren are located.
Fiscal disaster pending in Vermont: They
are asking Vermonters to pay more taxes, but get less health care"
From 1995 until late 2004, health care "reform"
in Vermont consisted of Gov. Dean's constant expansion of Medicaid to higher
income workers, known as the Vermont Health Access Plan. Since the plan's
costs rose much faster than the revenues assigned to pay for it, Gov. Dean
financed the expansion by progressively underpaying doctors, dentists,
hospitals and nursing homes. His successor, moderate Republican Jim Douglas,
ruefully announced in his 2005 inaugural address that the state was headed
for a $270 million Medicaid shortfall by 2007. But the new, exceptionally
left-wing legislature elected with him was eager to implement their platform
pledge of a single-payer health system. House Democrats, with a working
majority of 89-60, elected the very liberal Rep. Gaye Symington as speaker.
Rep. John Tracy, chairman of a new committee on health care reform, drove
his committee hard to come up with a plan. The eventual bill declared that
Vermont had no "clearly defined, integrated health care 'system,'" but
instead, a patchwork of programs, inequitably financed, leaving some 60,000
Vermonters without access to care. The proposed solution was universal
coverage for "essential" services as defined by legislative committee. The
state's 12 hospitals would be subjected to a binding "global budget."
Doctors and other providers would be compensated on a "reasonable" and
"sufficient" basis, in light of bureaucratically established "cost
containment targets." Private health insurance for essential services would
be abolished. The new system would be paid for by $2 billion in new payroll
and income taxes. The plan overlooked a few sticky considerations. Many
Vermonters go to hospitals in neighboring states: How could those hospitals
be forced to accept Vermont's government payment rates? What about sick
people migrating into Vermont to gain the benefit of the universal care? How
could the state have "single- payer" efficiency when Medicare, Medicaid, and
Veterans Administration care existed side by side with "Green Mountain
Health"? The final version of the bill, which appeared on the House floor on
April 20, didn't settle these questions. Nonetheless, the House passed the
single-payer plan on a vote of 86-58. Gov. Douglas attacked the measure as
potentially "devastating to our economy." "They are asking Vermonters to pay
more taxes, but get less health care," he said.
John McClaughry, "Canada South," The Wall Street Journal, May 5,
2005; Page A15 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111526276254825513,00.html?mod=opinion%5Fmain%5Ffeatured%5Fstories%5Fhs
Google Releases Web Accelerator: It's
free if you want to give it a try but there are some cautions
Google Inc. has launched in beta software that the
company says will speed up the time it takes to search the Internet and to
load web content. Web Accelerator, which is available at no charge, runs
alongside a browser and directs all searches and page requests through
Google's servers. The software supports Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer
and the Mozilla Foundation's Firefox browsers. In improving performance on
the web, the application makes use of a cache, or data store, on the local
computer, as well as caches on Google's servers, Marissa Mayer, director of
consumer web products for Google, said Thursday. The software is only
available for broadband users.
Antone Gonsalves, "Google Releases Web Accelerator," InternetWeek,
May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.internetweek.com/breakingNews/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=162600305
Also see
http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=162800052&tid=5979
Needs more work? In fairness, the Web
Accelerator is still in Beta form
Google’s web accelerator seems like a good thing for the public web, but it
can wreak havok on web-apps and other things with admin-links built into the
UI. How’s that? The accelerator scours a page and prefetches the content
behind each link. This gives the illusion of pages loading faster (since
they’ve already been pre-loaded behind the scenes). Here’s the problem:
Google is essentially clicking every link on the page — including links like
“delete this” or “cancel that.” And to make matters worse, Google ignores
the Javascript confirmations. So, if you have a “Are you sure you want to
delete this?” Javascript confirmation behind that “delete” link, Google
ignores it and performs the action anyway. We discovered this yesterday when
a few people were reporting that their Backpack pages were “disappearing.”
We were stumped until we dug a little deeper and discovered this Web
Accelerator behavior. Once we figured this out we added some code to prevent
Google from prefetching the pages and clicking the links, but it was quite
disconcerting.
"Google Web Accelerator Needs More Work," Addict3d, May 6, 2005 ---
http://addict3d.org/index.php?page=viewarticle&type=news&ID=6651
Google Web Accelerator Draws Concern
Google's release of its Web Accelerator has caused growing concern among
some developers that it may actually do more harm than good. In order to
speed up Web surfing, the tool automatically downloads URLs linked on page a
user is visiting, which means it might load administrative links for editing
or deleting content. The issue was discovered when users of Backpack, a
service designed to organize information for individuals and small
businesses in a wiki-like format, complained that their Web pages were
suddenly disappearing.
Ed Oswald and Nate Mook, "Google Web Accelerator Draws Concern," BetaNews,
May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.betanews.com/article/Google_Web_Accelerator_Draws_Concern/1115405686
"In Defense of Cheating," by Donald A.
Norman, UBIQUITY, vol. 6, issue 11, April 5-12, 2005 ---
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i11_norman.html
(Dr. Norman is a well-known computer scientist and author who often
challenges common thinking ---
http://www.jnd.org/ )
Jensen Comment: Norman tries to defend cheating "with attribution." It
seems like if there is attribution there is no cheating or else, if that
form of "cheating" isn't allowed, giving attribution simply yells out that
you're cheating anyway. Dr. Norman is a great scholar, but I don't go along
with him in this article.
Bob Jensen's threads on cheating are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/plagiarism.htm
Tasty diet foods ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/102/106859.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_01
Politics is always
darkest before the yawn.
Michael Duffy in the Sydney Morning Herald on May 7, 2005
Job market good news
The Labor Department said the economy added 274,000
jobs outside the farming sector in April, the fifth-largest gain in five
years. Wall Street had expected an increase of 174,000 jobs, according to a
survey by Bloomberg News
Jennifer Bayot, "U.S. Economy Added an Unexpected 274,000 Jobs in April,"
The New York Times, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/06/business/06cnd-econ.html
The confusing state of nanotechnology to
date
No doubt, that's where nanotechnology research
is right now. Scientists are learning how to unlock extraordinary
capabilities in commonplace materials by manipulating them on a molecular --
sometimes atomic -- scale. Nanotech has the potential to create everything
from faster and smaller computer chips, to smart medicines, to
straight-flying golf balls, and even car windshields that repel water
without wipers (see BW Cover Story, 2/14/05, "The Business of Nanotech").
But in a field with literally thousands of possible applications, a huge gap
often exists between what's theoretically possible in a lab and what can be
reliably produced for commercial use. For nano-entrepreneurs and scientists,
that gap makes the field especially tantalizing. And it makes it all the
more frustrating when a competitor's press release claims he has jumped that
gap with ease. So how can you tell who's the real deal? The term "nano," for
the most part, means little more than a size in the range of 1 to 100
nanometers. The width of a human hair, for example, is about 80,000
nanometers. The technology side of the equation comes into play with
research into the surprising behavior of various materials when manipulated
on that tiny level.
"Slugfest in the Nanotech Trenches," Business Week, February 23, 2005
---
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2005/tc20050223_5725_tc204.htm
Also see
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/issue/ftl_nano.asp?trk=nl
Bob Jensen's threads on ubiquitous computing
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ubiquit.htm
The confusing state of baseball today:
Its business and its history
My name is Maury Brown, and along with Gary
Gillette, the Co-Chairs of The Business of Baseball committee of SABR
(Society for American Baseball Research), we want to welcome you to this
research resource. The goal of this site is to provide research tools for
those wishing to learn more about the business end of professional baseball.
The site is broken into several areas, including Data (databases and
spreadsheets), Relocation and/or Expansion (documentation by jurisdictions
exploring relocation and/or expansion), Documents (various documents, both
current and historical, dealing with issues within the business of
baseball), Bios (biographies from members of SABR on persons within the
business of baseball), Reading Material (suggested reading material from the
Business of Baseball Committee of SABR), Interviews (interviews with
individuals that have had, or still do impact the business of baseball),
History, which chronicles key moments in baseball history as it relates to
the business side of things. And, the BizBall Forums, a location where
business of baseball articles are Blogged, and where discussion and
commentary occur (registration required).
The Business of Baseball ---
http://www.businessofbaseball.com/
The confusing state of innovation versus
privacy: The case of Google
Google just can't seem to make a move these
days without raising a red flag from privacy advocates. Where the search
giant sees innovation, others see a threat to consumers. The latest privacy
issue is with Google's Web Accelerator, the subject of today's Leading Off.
The software, which is installed on the desktop, boosts web search and
browsing through the use of data stores on the local computer and on
Google's servers. Storing data on a person's web activities is always a
concern among privacy advocates, who point out that the government, law
enforcement and lawyers can subpoena the information. Why put yourself at
risk for a service that you can easily live with out, advocates ask. A
similar complaint followed Google's release in April of the My Search
History tool, which tracked web searches, so a person could access them
later. Google, of course, argues that the value of the services far outweigh
their risks. For its part, Google says it doesn't track individuals on the
web, and wouldn't share data with anyone outside the company. I have a
feeling Google is going to run into these issues for a long time. As a
search company intensely focused on technology, Google is going to need to
gather and store data in order to innovate. As a result, people will always
wonder how others can misuse all that information.
Antone Gonsalves, Editor, InternetWeek, "The Google Dilemma,"
InternetWeek Newsletter, May 6, 2005
The Effect of The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002 on Market Liquidity
Investors and market makers rely heavily on the
trustworthiness and accuracy of corporate information to provide liquidity
and vibrancy to the capital markets. This paper analyzes market liquidity
measures before and after passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the
Act), aimed at reinforcing more accountability for public companies and
rebuilding investor confidence in public financial information. We detect
wider spreads, lower depths, and higher adverse selection component of
spreads in the period surrounding the reported financial scandals,
indicating that liquidity measures were deteriorated as a result of those
scandals. We find liquidity measures were improved following the passage of
the Act. Our cross sectional analysis indicates that these changes in
liquidity were pervasive and affected all types of firms, particularly large
firms. These findings suggest that the reported financial scandals had
negative impact on liquidity measures, which led to a decline in investor
confidence and that the Act improved liquidity measures.
Pankaj Jaine et al, "The Effect of The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 on Market
Liquidity," Unpublished Working Paper, March 2004 ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=488142
As noted by
Jim
Mahar on May 6, this earlier study detecting an impact of regulation on
performance differs from the following April 23, 2005 study that finds no
such difference. Such is life in capital market research.
The current
research examines whether financial services companies (such as Merrill
Lynch, Charles Schwab et al.) benefit from the rules designed and enforced
by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). I find that SEC rules
significantly reduce volatility of the financial companies, but not their
level of returns. Thus, SEC rules appear to be a mandatory hedging mechanism
designed to couch industrial shocks and stabilize financial industry
("tyranny of the status quo" per Becker (1983, p. 382)). Furthermore, SEC
rules do not appear to have any effect on other market participants commonly
thought to benefit from SEC rules. The persistence of this phenomenon,
contradicts existing regulation theories (i.e., market efficiency, Stigler
(1971), Peltzman (1976), and Becker (1983) theories), in which at least one
market party is to benefit from governmental intervention.
Irene E. Aldridge, "Do Financial Companies Benefit from SEC Regulation?"
Unpublished Working Paper ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=705461
Mind Wide Open: Your Brain and the
Neuroscience of Everyday Life
Steven Johnson, the author of last year's "Mind
Wide Open: Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life," is now
determined to topple the reigning clichés about pop culture. Not to worry
about all those sarcastic sitcoms, humiliating reality shows and murderous
video games, he says in "Everything Bad Is Good for You" (Riverhead Books,
238 pages, $23.95). Throughout the vast wasteland a kind of education is
taking place: Electronic culture and movies are teaching us how to grapple
with an ever more complex society. Following Marshall 0.McLean, Mr. Johnson
argues that most of us pay too much attention to the content of pop culture
and not enough to how the culture alters our minds and frames what we learn.
Video games may be obsessed with shooting aliens and rescuing princesses,
but they build cognitive muscle by dangling rewards and forcing
decision-making. They develop "visual intelligence" and "coping skills."
John Leo, "The New Life of the Mind," The Wall Street Journal, May 5,
2005; Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111524562441625066,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Faculty Towers: The Academic Novel and
Its Discontents
Elaine Showalter opens her new book on the academic
novel by noting the theory that the novel generally took off because people
wanted to read about people like themselves. So it’s not surprising that
Showalter, an emeritus professor of English at Princeton University, would
consider the academic novel her favorite literary genre. In
Faculty Towers: The Academic Novel and Its Discontents, published
this spring by the University of Pennsylvania Press, she reviews the genre,
which first appeared in significant form in the 50s and has thrived ever
since. Showalter answered some questions from Inside Higher Ed about her new
book and the state of academic fiction . . . A novel often cited as a
long-time favorite by my women friends in academia is Gail Godwin’s The
Odd Woman; the cleverest and most recognizable recent academic satire is
The Lecturer’s Tale, by James Hynes. I also think that Joanne
Dobson’s “Karen Pelletier” mysteries give an excellent sense of the
academic life.
Scott Jaschik, " ‘Faculty Towers’," Inside Higher Ed, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/05/novel
Mind narrow closed: This
professor has to be an embarrassment to Baylor University
Marc H. Ellis is university
professor and director of the Center for American and Jewish
Studies at Baylor University, a Baptist University in Waco,
Texas, not ordinarily on anyone's radar map as a
particularly notable institution when it comes to the field
of Jewish scholarship. Indeed, theologically Waco is best
known for serving as home of the Branch Davidians and the
abortive FBI raid on its headquarters. Thus fringe
"theologians" seem to feel right at home there. Maybe it has
something to do with being home to singer Willie Nelson.
Unlike Norman Finkelstein, who has never managed to hold any
sort of real academic position for very long and is these
days an untenured assistant professor at DePaul University,
Ellis pretends to have serious academic credentials. He
claims to have written actual scholarly books, unlike
Finkelstein's low-brow obscene Jew-baiting propaganda. But,
in fact, there are surprisingly few differences between
Finkelstein's anti-Semitism and Ellis' "scholarly work".
Indeed, the two have a long history of collaboration with
one another. They appear at one another's conferences and on
one another's web sites, endorsing one another with true
brotherly comradeship . . . The first hint one has of the
real orientation of this atrocious little book, which
purports to be a theological re-examination of what it means
to be Jewish after the Holocaust, is that the only people
Ellis and his publisher could find to endorse the book on
the jacket are members of the Terrorism Lobby: Edward Said,
Noam Chomsky, and their ilk. Not a single Jewish theologian.
Pro-terror and Islamist web sites have given the book rave
reviews. So has the PLO's web site. The leftist extremist
magazine "The Nation" recently praised the book's call for
Israel to be eliminated, although expressing dislike for the
fact that Ellis thinks religion still has some positive
roles to play in the 21st century. Need we say more? This
poorly-written book, the latest in the series of sophomoric
Israel-bashing propaganda tirades published by Pluto Press -
by the way, is little more than a vicious anti-Israel
broadside. The only thing of value that Ellis thinks Jews
should derive from their experiences during the Holocaust is
an unambiguous denunciation of Israel and total support for
the demands and agenda of the Palestinian terrorists. He
denounces all Jewish denominations and all rabbinic
institutions for their failures to endorse Palestinian
violence unreservedly. He is as hostile to the Jews of
America as he is to Israel: "We as Jews come after the
Holocaust, but we also come after the illusory promises of
Israel and America. And we cannot find our way alone, only
with others who realize that the promises they have been
handed are also illusory."
Steven Plaut, "Baylor University’s Anti-Jewish Liberation
'Theologian'," FrontPageMag.com, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17755
No comment other than
Grrrrr!
Six years after Kansas ignited a
national debate over the teaching of evolution, the state is
poised to push through new science standards this summer
requiring that Darwin's theory be challenged in the
classroom.
Jodi Wilgoren, "In Kansas, Darwinism Goes on Trial Once More
E-Mail This Printer-Friendly Single-Page," The New York
Times, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/06/education/06evolution.html
Jews Most Distinctive
Group in America?
"New AJC Report Says Jews Most Distinctive Group in
America," American Jewish Committee, March 4, 005 ---
http://www.ajc.org/InTheMedia/PressReleases.asp?did=1594
On
the religious front,
Jews are the least
likely of any religious
group in America to pray
on a daily basis, at 26
percent, compared with
56 percent of non-Jews;
they are also the least
likely to be sure that
God exists. Still, the
same percentage of Jews
and non-Jews say they
have a strong religious
attachment.
Among other findings,
the reports states that:
-
Jews are the most
pro-civil liberties
of all ethnic groups
on most issues;
-
Jews strongly
support separation
of church and state,
and are the group
most in favor of the
Supreme Court ruling
against school
prayer;
-
Jews are more
supportive of racial
equality,
integration, and
intergroup tolerance
than other groups
are.
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The American Dream is the
Arab American Dream
In a compact stone and glass
building here, the creators of the Arab American National
Museum seek to set the record straight. "If somebody else
tells your story, it's not your story," Ismael Ahmed told
me, "and in this case, we even think the story has been told
with malice" by others. Mr. Ahmed heads the nonprofit
social-services organization in Dearborn that built the
museum, which opens today. By malice, he meant a desire to
portray Arab-Americans as out of the mainstream, hostile
toward the U.S. and possibly sympathetic toward terrorism.
The museum uses personal artifacts, skillfully distilled
reminiscences and absorbing interactive displays to recount
the tale of Arab immigration and accomplishment since the
late 1800s. There is much to boast about, but just below the
surface of the museum's colorful exhibits -- and sometimes
emerging into full view -- is a sense that corrections are
needed; wrongs must be righted. It makes for a lively museum
experience.
Paul M. Barrett, "Arab-Americans Tell Their Own Story,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 5, 2005; Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111524404860525041,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
The American Dream
becomes a nightmare for GM and Ford
In a double blow to the U.S.
auto industry, Standard & Poor's Corp. yesterday cut its
credit ratings on General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co.,
pushing to "junk" status two icons of American business.
S&P, which had warned in recent weeks that both companies
could be downgraded, said it reduced the ratings because of
increasing doubts about the strategies the companies are
following, in particular their heavy reliance on big
sport-utility vehicles, sales of which are now falling.
Lee Hawkins, Jr., "S&P Cuts Rating On GM and Ford To Junk
Status: Double Blow Underlines Big Problems in Detroit,
Adds to Bond-Market Jitters," The Wall Street Journal, May
6, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111530407208325777,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Also see the NYT version at
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/06/automobiles/06auto.html?
Air Force Sets New
Inquiry at Academy
The Pentagon is sending
investigators to the Air Force Academy to look into
complaints that evangelical Christian faculty members,
officers and cadets routinely proselytize and intimidate
those on campus who do not hold the same religious beliefs.
The inquiry follows accusations that these other cadets have
long been subject to a climate of religious intolerance. To
address the problem, the academy, in Colorado Springs, began
requiring its faculty and students in March to attend
50-minute sensitivity training classes.
Laurie Goldstein, "Air Force Sets New Inquiry at Academy,"
The New York Times, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/05/education/05academy.html
Religious Tolerance or Lack Thereof at
the Air Force Academy
According to
recent news reports, the U.S. Air Force
Academy, which is just now recovering
from one series of scandals involving
harassment (and worse) directed at
female cadets and another involving
underage drinking, now finds itself
embroiled in yet another case of
questionable behavior. In the last few
years there have been some 55 complaints
of religious bias at the Academy. Johnny
Whitaker, an Academy spokesperson said
that some of the complaints involved
religious slurs, while others involved
proselytizing in inappropriate places.
He went on to say that "there have been
cases of maliciousness,
mean-spiritedness and attacking or
baiting someone over religion." And,
last year the Air Force Academy football
coach, Fisher DeBerry, was called to
task for promoting Christianity to his
players with a locker room banner that
included the lines "I am a Christian
first and last.... I am a member of Team
Jesus Christ." DeBerry removed the
banner, but is considering continuing
team prayers after football games next
season -- but this time without
reference to a specific religion.
Mark H. Shapiro, "Tolerance or Lack
Thereof at the Air Force Academy,"
The Irascible Professor, April 22,
2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-22-05.htm
Note that the Princeton
Review ranks the Air Force Academy Number 3
in terms of Race/Class Interaction
http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/rankings/rankingCategory.asp?categoryID=3
1 McGill
University
2 Austin College
3 United States
Air Force
Academy
4 St. John's
College (MD)
5 Webb Institute
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Wadud challenges
patriarchal dominance over Islamic teaching and practice
March 18 was an eventful day for
Muslims in the West. In New York, Amina Wadud, a professor
of Islamic studies at Virginia Commonwealth University,
became one of the few Muslim women to lead a Friday
congregational prayer. Meanwhile, in Sydney, Sheik Faiz
Mohamad made comments linking rape and women's dress that
have become infamous over the past few weeks. The contrast
could not be starker. Wadud's actions were a deliberately
provocative challenge to perceived patriarchal dominance
over Islamic teaching and practice. Through this act,
organisers asserted women would reclaim their right to be
spiritual equals and leaders. It was a response to an
increasing feeling among Muslim women of exclusion from
mosques and positions of influence in the Muslim community.
It had echoes of Rosa Parkes, the black woman who set the
American civil rights movement alight when she defiantly
refused to move to the back of the bus, where blacks
belonged, and was arrested for her trouble.
Waleed Aly"Islam faces big questions about its future in the
West, as one day of controversy showed," Sydney Morning
Herald, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/05/05/1115092623270.html
Microsoft reverses its
stand on gay rights: A message for the CEO Steve Ballmer to
all of Microsoft's employees
Accordingly, Microsoft will
continue to join other leading companies in supporting
federal legislation that would prohibit employment
discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation -- adding
sexual orientation to the existing law that already covers
race, sex, national origin, religion, age and disability.
Given the importance of diversity to our business, it is
appropriate for the company to endorse legislation that
prohibits employment discrimination on all of these grounds.
Obviously, the Washington State legislative session has
concluded for this year, but if legislation similar to HB
1515 is introduced in future sessions, we will support it .
. . I also want to be clear about some limits to this
approach. Many other countries have different political
traditions for public advocacy by corporations, and I’m not
prepared to involve the company in debates outside the US in
such circumstances. And, based on the principles I’ve just
outlined, the company should not and will not take a
position on most other public policy issues, either in the
US or internationally. I respect that there will be
different viewpoints. But as CEO, I am doing what I believe
is right for our company as a whole.
"Text of Steve Ballmer E-Mail to U.S. Microsoft Employees
Regarding Public Policy Engagement," Microsoft Press Release
on May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/misc/05-06-05StevebPublicPolicy.asp
Who Owns Research at
Brown University?
Brown University officials agreed Tuesday to clarify a
proposed intellectual property
policy that some professors
said would have infringed on their rights and made it
impossible for them to consult with businesses.The
clarifications largely satisfied professors, and the faculty
overwhelmingly approved the revised proposal, which now goes
to Brown’s board, which is expected to approve it.
Administrators said the policy was never intended to be as
restrictive as the critics feared — but that they were happy
that everyone was now on board.
Scott Jaschik, "Who Owns Research at Brown?" Inside
Higher Ed, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/05/brown
Surprise! Surprise! FBI probing insurance
industry
The Federal Bureau of Investigation said it is
conducting a wide-ranging inquiry into the insurance industry and could
extend the probe to banking and other financial sectors, in the wake of the
accounting scandal at American International Group Inc. FBI investigators
and insurance regulators from multiple states will meet in Manhattan today,
according to people familiar with the matter. Insurance specialists are
expected to brief the investigators on the nuances of the sorts of complex
transactions that can be used to manipulate financial statements. FBI
officials arranged the meeting through the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners last week.
Anne Marie Soueo and Theo Francis, "AIG Investigation Sparks FBI Probe Of
Insurance Firms," The Wall Street Journal, May 5, 2005; Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111523416486324807,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Dumb and Dumber Crooks
What's dumber than handing a bank teller a holdup note written on the back
of your own utility bill?
Joe Wells tells us in the May 2005 edition of the Journal of Accountancy
---
http://www.aicpa.org/pubs/jofa/may2005/wells.htm
Smarter and Meaner Crooks
Security experts say they started to see
online-extortion attempts two or three years ago. Law-enforcement officials
say that the number of cases involving online extortion is increasing, but
statistics are hard to come by because perpetrators are often prosecuted
under laws covering other offenses, such as money laundering. And, as with
conventional blackmail, companies are reluctant to report cyber-extortion
attempts, partly for fear of bad publicity. "A lot of companies decide that
it is better to deal with it privately," says David Thomas, head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's computer-intrusion section. Even if they
don't report attacks to the police, extortion victims often seek help from
Internet-security companies. Prolexic Technologies Inc., a Florida
security-technology company, says that about 85 of its customers have been
targets of online blackmail attempts, up from 25 at the end of 2003, when
Prolexic was founded. Victims typically are businesses that rely heavily on
the Internet, such as online-payment processors, gambling Web sites, and
foreign-exchange and other financial-services sites. Small and midsize
businesses often are most vulnerable, because their networks typically
aren't protected as well as those of large corporations.
Cassell Bryan-Low, "Tech-Savvy Blackmailers Hone A New Form of Extortion,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 5, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111525378869925341,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
How an online business fought
back against Internet extortion ---
http://wagblog.internetweek.com/archives/002789.html
Isn’t It Ironic?
There is the irony of Plato’s dialogues, where men
who are very sure of their own competence try to explain things to Socrates
(who says that he knows nothing, yet quickly, through simple questions, ties
their arguments into the Athenian equivalent of pretzels). There is dramatic
irony, in which action on stage means one thing for the characters and
something very different for the audience. And let’s not even get started on
where the German philosophers went with it — beyond noting that it turned
into something like the essence of art, consciousness, and human existence.
I’m not saying that there is no connection at all between the Philosophical
Fragments of Friedrich Schlegel and the camp value of listening to The
Carpenters’ Greatest Hits. Actually, they go together pretty well, if you’re
in the right mood. (As Schlegel put it: “For a man who has achieved a
certain height and universality of cultivation, his inner being is an
ongoing chain of the most enormous revolutions.” So you might start out
feeling all ironic about Karen Carpenter, then end up overwhelmed by her
voice.)
Scott McClemee, "Isn’t It Ironic?" Inside Higher Ed, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/05/mclemee
Listen to Karen Carpenter ---
http://www.mymusicattic.org/Page19.html
American Historical Association warns:
Avoid ‘the Dustbin of History’
Master’s degree programs in history play a role far
more influential than would be indicated by the number of students enrolled.
Because those students go on to either earn Ph.D.’s, teach in community
colleges, teach in high schools or work in “public history,” these programs
have a broad impact on what millions of Americans will be taught about
history. But a new report from the American Historical Association warns
that many of these programs lack direction, fail to prepare students for the
careers they are seeking, and can’t answer basic questions about their
missions. In addition, the report notes that despite the wide range of
career options available for master’s recipients, the number of M.A.’s
awarded in history dropped 16 percent between 1996 and 2002 – a period in
which total master’s degrees were on the rise.
Scott Jaschik, "Avoiding ‘the Dustbin of History’," Inside Higher Ed,
May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/05/masters
George Mason University: School of IT
and Engineering seeking true national prominence and leadership
Each of the 300 technology professionals who
attended the annual gala for George Mason University's School of Information
Technology and Engineering Friday evening walked away with a compact disc of
classical music containing a thinly veiled message from Lloyd Griffiths ,
dean of the department. "With the help of corporate sponsors and individuals
like yourself, we'll move the School of IT and Engineering into a position
of true national prominence and leadership," Griffiths says on the CD.
Ellen McCarthy, "GMU Looking To Raise Profile And $15 Million,"
Washington Post, March 5, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050402144.html?referrer=email
Not Nice Nice: Medical rationing
on the U.K.'s national health plan
A national health advisory body has proposed
denying patients certain treatment on the grounds of their age, it confirmed
today. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (Nice),
which provides guidance on public health issues, set out the controversial
ideas in a new consultation paper.
"Denied treatment because they are too old," Daily Mail, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/health/healthmain.html?in_article_id=347438&in_page_id=1774
How much money do kids spend online on
average?
"Playing spend-and-seek online," Chicago Tribune, May 3, 2005 ---
http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0505030269may03,1,5727848.story?coll=chi-techtopheds-hed
Many kids shop
on the Internet, or they check out stuff online that later they buy at a
store. Here's how much money is involved on average in a year:
Online spending
AGES 8 TO 12: $51
AGES 13 TO 15: $424
Other spending first researched online
AGES 8 TO 12: $168
AGES 13 TO 15: $442
Technology trivia from the Washington
Post on May 5, 2005
America Online plans to ditch its decade-old
instant messaging platform. What's the next generation of its IM software
called?
A.
Larissa
B.
Nereid
C.
Proteus
D.
Triton
Now she's really smoking
Michigan resident Julia Sidebottom inhaled
sharply when she opened her mailbox earlier this year and was greeted with
an unexpected and unwelcome bill from the state for $4,753.89 in unpaid
cigarette and sales taxes. For several years, Sidebottom's boyfriend
purchased cigarettes online at
www.esmokes.com,
one of 13 online cigarette retailers from which
Michigan recently subpoenaed customer lists. She said the bill caught her
completely off guard. "It never even crossed our minds," said Sidebottom,
whose 57-year-old boyfriend suffers from Alzheimer's and has granted her
power of attorney. "I search the Web all the time for the best deals on
everything. Never in a million years did I expect the state to come back and
say we own them money." Sidebottom is one of more than 1,500 Michigan
residents who recently were mailed bills for the cigarette and sales taxes
they had avoided by buying their smokes from online retailers. After 30
days, Sidebottom's letter informed her that a 100 percent penalty would be
added to her existing debt.
Kathleen Hunter, "States hunt down online cigarette buyers,"
State Line, May 3, 2005 ---
http://www.stateline.org/live/ViewPage.action?siteNodeId=136&languageId=1&contentId=29157
This guy is a really bad shot
A man shot himself five times before driving from
his Godfrey, Ill., home to a bridge -- a distance that took 10 minutes --
and jumped from a bridge. Sixty-seven-year-old Franklin Carver shot himself
three times in his head and twice in his chest, but none of the shots was
immediately fatal, police said.A motorist witnessed the jump and called 911
from a cell phone, but Carver drowned before emergency workers could reach
him, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported Tuesday. "This is probably the
most unusual suicide case I've ever seen in my career," said Lt. David Hayes
of the Alton Police Department. "It's a bizarre case; it really is."
"Man shoots himself, then jumps off bridge," Washington Times, May 3,
2005 ---
http://washingtontimes.com/upi-breaking/20050503-030050-6791r.htm
How to lie (at least a bit) with
statistics as forwarded by Dick Haar
If you consider that there have been an average of
160,000 troops in Iraq during the last 22 months and the firearm death rate
has been 60 per 100,000. The rate in DC is 80.6 per 100,000. That means that
you are more likely to be shot and killed in our Nation's Capitol, which has
some of the strictest gun control laws in the nation, than you are in Iraq.
Here are the 10 Most Read Articles on
NYTimes.com from the past two weeks (as of 11 a.m. ET, May 6).
1) 'Today' Seeks Yesterday's Glory By
ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Published: April 25, 2005 NBC executives seem to think
that viewers have grown bored with "Today" and want more gimmicks and pizazz.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Click here!
2) John Tierney: Laura Bush Talks Naughty
Published: May 3, 2005 The coverage of Laura Bush's racy comic debut may
change some minds, but for devout Bush-bashers, it's much easier to stay the
course.
Click here!
3) Frank Rich: A High-Tech Lynching in Prime
Time Published: April 24, 2005 "Justice Sunday," the judge-bashing rally
being disseminated nationwide by cable, satellite and Internet, has a gay
agenda.
Click here!
4) Paul Krugman: The Oblivious Right
Published: April 25, 2005 President Bush and other Republican leaders
honestly think that we're living in the best of times. That's because
everyone they talk to says so.
Click here!
5) At Wal-Mart, Choosing Sides Over $9.68 an
Hour By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Published: May 4, 2005 With most of Wal-Mart's
workers earning less than $19,000 a year, several groups have teamed up to
prod Wal-Mart into paying its employees higher wages.
Click here!
6) Maureen Dowd: All That Glisters Is Gold
Published: May 4, 2005 The moral of the pretty duckling.
Click here!
7) The Mystery of Hollywood's Dead
Republican By DAVID M. HALBFINGER and DENNIS McDOUGAL, Published: April 26,
2005 How did a life of adventure end in Carrie Fisher's bedroom?
Click here!
8) Turbulence on Campus in 60's Hardened
Views of Future Pope By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, DANIEL J. WAKIN and MARK LANDLER,
Published: April 24, 2005 The protests of student radicals at Tubingen
University shaped the man who now leads the Roman Catholic Church.
Click here!
9) Bloodied Marines Sound Off About Want of
Armor and Men By MICHAEL MOSS, Published: April 25, 2005 Marine leaders and
infantrymen of a unit that sustained heavy losses say a lack of armor and
manpower hampered their efforts.
Click here!
10) Maureen Dowd: U.N.leash Woolly Bully
Bolton Published: April 27, 2005 John Bolton, who tried to stretch the truth
on foreign weapons programs, deserves to be rewarded as other Bush officials
have been.
Click here!
Music for the Quiet of Summer:
Shepherd Moons (in a purple sky) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/purplesky.htm
Train of
Life (Willie Nelson
and Patsy Cline) ---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
The University of Auckland's
Derek Speer reminded me that when you wish upon a star, it makes no
difference who your are ---
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/index.cfm?c_id=7&ObjectID=10123213
New edition of the
Redneck Scrapbook ---
http://boortz.com/more/funny/redneck_pics_portrait.html
Nothing is ever a total loss; it can always serve as a bad example.
As seen at the bottom of a message from Aaron Konstam
Three cheers for Connie and her winning
team
“Accounting is like a foreign language,” Stone
explained to the Hood County News. “It’s really the language of business.
Everything revolves around accounting no matter what industry you’re in. I
think it’s information for life. It’s a life skill.
Connie Stone, Accounting Coach in the Grady High School University
Interscholastic League (UIL) accounting team swept the top three honors in
their first year of 5A competition earlier this month, AccountingWeb,
April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100826
A heart-warming Mothers' Day story: She
brought an abandoned baby home to her litter of puppies
A stray dog saved the life of a newborn baby
after finding the abandoned infant in a forest and apparently carrying it
across a busy road and through some barbed wire to her litter of puppies,
witnesses said. The stray dog found the infant, clad in tattered clothing,
in a poor neighborhood near the Ngong Forests in the capital of Nairobi,
Stephen Thoya told the independent Daily Nation newspaper. The dog
apparently found the baby Friday in the plastic bag in which the infant had
been abandoned, said Aggrey Mwalimu, owner of the shed where the animal was
guarding its puppies. The seven-pound, four-ounce infant was taken to the
hospital for treatment on Saturday. "She is doing well, responding to
treatment, she is stable. ... She is on antibiotics," Kenyatta National
Hospital spokeswoman Hanna Gakuo told The Associated Press from the
hospital, where health workers called the infant Angel.
Rodrique Ngowi, "Stray Dog in Kenya Saves Abandoned Baby," Yahoo News, May
9, 2005 ---
http://story.news.yahoo.com/s/ap/kenya_abandoned_baby
An unbelievable UN blunder is partly to
blame for the loss of 227,000 lives
The U.N. agency charged with monitoring seismic
activity around the globe sent all of its 310 employees on vacation the week
of the massive earthquake and tsunami in South Asia, preventing any
possibility of warning to the 227,000 victims.
Joseph Farah, "The day U.N. killed 227,000 Why there was no tsunami warning
from agency monitoring seismic activity," World Net Daily, May 9,
2005 ---
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=44160
Nothing is poison
and everything is poison; the difference is in the dose.
Paracelsus
SMU adjunct professor fired because of
blog that described the dark side of student life and learning
And indeed she writes about plenty of material
that you won’t find in viewbooks. Student views of sex and sexual
harassment. Use of Illegal drugs. Student stress (up to and including
hospitalization). Crime on campus. Students who don’t know how to write
well. And more. (After Liner was told this semester would be her last, she
took much of her site down, but has since restored a large sampling, which
you can read from the link at the top of this article.) And the Phantom
Professor didn’t just report, but added plenty of wry commentary, especially
about dealing with wealthy students at SMU. Phantom called the wealthy
female students “Ashleys” and didn’t hold back the sarcasm about them,
sometimes noting whether a student she was discussing in a posting was or
was not an “Ashley.”
Scott Jaschik, "The Phantom Professor," Inside Higher Ed, May 11,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/11/phantom
Trivia Quiz
What board game turned 70 years old, sold over 200 million copies, and was
played by over 750 million people?
Answer
Its name is something we abhor in capitalism ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100847
eBooks have more between the covers
But, because they're created as PDFs, they have
electronic advantages over their printed kin. Connolly inserts video clips
into the files, making interactive e-books that can span 200 pages in length
and have the feel of a TV, Web, and print combo and yet are like nothing
else in the industry. "This is the future," said Connolly. "People have been
so afraid to explore what can be done with PDFs, because they think users
won't download big files. But what we've found in creating these media-rich
projects is that there's just about no limit to the file size that people
will download. They want richer, more robust content, and they'll be happy
to wait through the download for it."
Elizabeth Millar, "Bigger Can Be Better with Downloadable PDFs," PDFzone,
May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.pdfzone.com/article2/0,1759,1813777,00.asp
Link forwarded by Richard Campbell
Philosophy "Notes" of Professor Allen
Stairs:
From Ayn Rand to abortion to homosexuality to Web page construction
Rand maintains that such an ethics leads one to take extreme situations --
e.g., people drowning or caught in fires -- as the central ones for ethics.
She thinks that anyone who accepts the ethic of altruism will have no
self-esteem, will see humanity as a tribe of doomed beggars, will see
existence as fundamentally desperate and will actually become indifferent to
ethics due to a preoccupation with extreme situations rather than what we
might call "real life."
Allen Stairs, "Ayn Rand on the Virtue of Selfishness" ---
http://brindedcow.umd.edu/140/rand.html
You might note the other philosophy "Notes"
of Allen Stairs at
http://brindedcow.umd.edu/140/index.html that contain the following
proviso: "Web surfer's caveat: These are course notes, intended to augment
classroom discussion of the issues and readings. They should be read as such
and are not intended for general distribution or publication." In other
words they are intended to stimulate discussion and are not intended to
either be truth or revealing of Professor Stairs' personal opinions.
Notes:
Note his link to "What's Dwight Yoakam got
to do with philosophy" ---
http://brindedcow.umd.edu/170/yoakam.html
BYU study of meanness in toddlers: Some
aren't so sweet as they pretend
Meanness in girls can start when they still are
toddlers, a Brigham Young University study found. It found that girls as
young as 3 or 4 will use manipulation and peer pressure to get what they
want . . . Hart said other research has found that about 17 percent to 20
percent of preschool and school-age girls display such behavior. It also
shows up in boys, but much less frequently. "The typical mantra is that boys
are more aggressive than girls, but in the last decade we've learned that
girls can be just as aggressive as boys, just in different ways," he said .
. . Hart said the study may help teachers and parents key into relational
aggression and the psychological and emotional trauma it can cause. Just as
they do with physical aggression, adults need to monitor such behavior and
help children recognize the harm it can cause.
"Study: Mean Girls Start As Tots," CBS News, May 7, 2005
---
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/05/07/tech/main693714.shtml
Brain Responses Vary By Sexual
Orientation
The brains of homosexual men respond more like
those of women when reacting to a chemical derived from the male sex
hormone, new evidence of physical differences related to sexual orientation.
The finding, published in today's issue of Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, shows differences in physiological reaction to sex
hormones. Researchers led by Ivanka Savic at the Karolinska Institute in
Stockholm, Sweden, exposed heterosexual men and women and homosexual men to
chemicals derived from male and female sex hormones. These chemicals are
thought to be pheromones, molecules known to trigger responses such as
defense and sex in many animals.
"Brain Responses Vary By Sexual Orientation, New Research Shows," The
Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111566679033228408,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Equity Investing: Futures and options
record month
The CBOT’s Equity futures and options complex set a new monthly volume
record at 2,775,907 contracts. Within the complex, Equity futures volume
rose to a new monthly high of 2,691,253 contracts.
Chicago Board of Trade newsletter called CBOT Trader on May 10, 2005
Jensen Comment: A lot of investors are betting on movements, but there are
opposing directional bets on every position in futures and options. except
in the case of option writers (sellers) who often bet on no serious
movement in either direction.
Update on the dirty
secrets of academe: Are we elitist and self-aggrandizing to a fault?
I’m glad to report that the full professor soon
left the university, the book came out, I got tenure, was promoted, and life
has been rosy ever since. But the professor’s elitist drivel still sticks in
my craw because his snobbery runs so rampant in the academy today — as what
I experienced with the dopey professor from the Department of Cinema and
Comparative Literature.
Stephen G. Bloom, "Hello Sy Hershman, Goodbye Bob Woodward," Inside
Higher Ed, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/04/bloom3
A not-so-collegial reply
from Sasha Waters
Writing in the journalistic
tradition of an O’Reilly or a Limbaugh, Stephen Bloom’s
vituperative and bizarrely personal attack on “sniveling”
academics, especially the snarling, spitting, sneering,
“dopey” assistant professor mauled in his article
“Hello Sy Hershman, Goodbye Bob
Woodward,” is highly
instructive — although not perhaps in the way our ersatz
Woody-Allen-of-the-Plains here at the University of Iowa
intends. What it reveals most is the ease with which male
professors can still abuse with impunity the power and
privilege of their gender and rank . . . Mr. Bloom’s
imaginative assertions that anyone suggested we “lock the
doors” and “pummel the propagandists” in a “bloodbath” are
outright lies. How do I know? Because I am the female
assistant professor Bloom vilifies in his rant. Although he
does not name me, I am easily identifiable in our small
academic community (there are only three female assistant
professors in my department) . . . short, this daring man of
letters Mr. Bloom has used his academic and journalistic
freedom and the safety of tenure for the noble aim of
publicly berating and ridiculing a junior colleague whom he
encountered once in a meeting that took place six months
ago. The real lesson about the halls of higher learning we
can glean from Stephen Bloom’s piece is, quite sadly, that
junior women of the academy should think twice before
voicing opinions contrary to those of swaggering bullies who
out-rank them.
Sasha Waters, "Goodbye Collegiality, Hello Spineless
Bullying," Inside Higher Ed, May 10, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/10/waters
Where does the highly talented Garrison
Keillor look for material? You might be surprised!
My taste is catholic; I don't go looking for people
like me (earnest liberal English majors). I am a fan of the preachers on
little AM stations in early morning and late at night who sit in a tiny
studio in Alabama or Tennessee and patiently explain the imminence of the
Second Coming--I grew up with good preaching, and it is an art that, unlike
anything I find in theaters, has the power to shake me to my toes. And
gospel music is glorious beyond words. I love the mavericks and freethinkers
and obsessives who inhabit the low-power FM stations--the feminist bluegrass
show, the all-Sinatra show, the Yiddish vaudeville show. Once, on the
Merritt Parkway heading for New York, I came upon The American Atheist Hour,
the sheer tedium of which was wildly entertaining--there's nobody so
humorless as a devout atheist. I love the great artists of public radio who
simulate spontaneity so beautifully they almost fool me--Terry Gross, Ira
Glass, the Car Talk brothers--all carefully edited and shaped, but big as
life on the radio, smarter than hell, cooler than cucumbers. I love the
good-neighbor small-town radio of bake sales and Rotary meetings and Krazy
Daze and livestock reports and Barb calling in to report that Pookie was
found and thanks to everybody who was on the lookout for her. Good-neighbor
radio used to be everywhere and was especially big in big cities--WGN in
Chicago, WCCO in Minneapolis-St. Paul, WOR in New York, KOA in Denver, KMOX
in St. Louis, KSL in Salt Lake City--where avuncular men chatted about
fishing and home repair and other everyday things and Library Week was
observed and there was live coverage of a tornado or a plane crash and on
summer nights you heard the ball game. Meanwhile lawn mowers were sold and
skin cream and dairy goods and flights to Acapulco.
Garrison Keillor, "Confessions of a Listener," The Nation, May 5,
2005 ---
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050523&s=keillor
NPR too Gray says Scott Sherman
Smiley directed his firepower at an organization
that has accomplished a great deal in recent years. Thanks in part to NPR's
comprehensive foreign coverage, its listenership has soared since 9/11: In
the wake of the attacks on New York and Washington, NPR gained (and has
kept) nearly 4 million new listeners, and the network's various programs now
reach 23 million listeners a week on more than 780 member stations. Morning
Edition is now the most listened-to morning show in the country. As the
listenership grew, so did the philanthropic largesse: In November 2003 NPR
received a stunning $236 million bequest from the estate of Joan Kroc, the
widow of McDonald's founder Ray Kroc. But Smiley ruined the party both by
calling attention to the shortcomings of an institution that emerged from
Lyndon Johnson's Great Society and by underlining the gap between NPR's
rhetoric--in this case, about racial inclusion--and reality. The entity that
calls itself National Public Radio, he reminded us, is not serving the
entire public. "You'd be amazed," he told Salon, "at the number of people of
color who do not know what NPR is."
Scott Sherman, "Good, Gray NPR," The Nation, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050523&s=sherman
Freedom of speech versus the Internet in
Singapore
The pressing issue here is not whether or not
of Mr. Chen's remarks were indeed defamatory as the agency contends. The
larger issue is what role the Internet will play in Singapore. Cherian
George, an academic at the communications school at Nanyang Technological
University, tells us that in Singapore, the Internet has been significantly
freer than newspapers, because the government has decided to treat most of
the Internet as private communication. Still, this freedom has its limits,
as political and religious Web sites, for example, need to register. Mr.
George says that while it is too soon to say what this A*Star case portends,
it raises the important question of whether Singapore's Internet regulations
will be adjusted in order to cover blogs as well as Web sites. "It is a
landmark case," Mr. George tells us. "It does bring blogging into the public
sphere, so to speak."
"Singapore and the Internet," The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111567690051528580,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Freedom of speech versus hurt feelings at
Dartmouth
Can speech that hurts feelings get you in
trouble at Dartmouth College? That’s what libertarian critics of the college
have been charging for some time, saying that the college has a speech code
that squelches free expression. Dartmouth has said that its policies have
been distorted. But this month, the college clarified its stance and at
least some of its critics now say that the college no longer has policies
that inhibit free speech on the campus. The clarification comes as the
college is counting the votes in a trustee election in which the college’s
speech policies were a major issue.
Scott Jaschik, "Freer Speech at Dartmouth?" Inside Higher Ed, May 10,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/10/dartmouth
Job market site from the AACSB (It
includes the higher education job market) ---
http://www.aacsb.edu/jobs2/
Bob Jensen's threads on careers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#careers
And a beleaguered Tweedie Bird never got
a nickel from this cat's owner
A woman who sued a neighbor after his dog
mauled her cat to death has been awarded more than $45,000. Retired teacher
Paula Roemer's 12-year-old cat, Yofi, was attacked in her back yard in
February 2004 by a chow belonging to her neighbor, Wallace Gray. The dog had
repeatedly escaped in the past, according to the lawsuit.
"Washington State Woman Awarded $45,000 for Cat Killed by Neighbor's Dog,"
Associated Press, May 9, 2005 ---
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGB4JC3SI8E.html
Rent movies for $10 per month ---
http://web.netflix.com/Default?mqso=60186732
(Link forwarded by Debbie Bowling)
Bob Jensen's threads on entertainment are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Some guys have twice as much fun, at
least up to a point Down Under
This is the extraordinary tale of one man, two women, two funerals and a
messy, looming legal battle.
"Al Grassby's double life," Sydney Morning Herald, May 8, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/05/07/1115422847039.html
Jensen Comment: Grassby probably copped the idea from biographies of U.S.
legislators.
Advice to business students: Learn some
Chinese
China, where there has been rapid economic growth
in the past few years, has the most allure. But other markets, including
India and Singapore, also are drawing M.B.A. job candidates. They're
attracted by the adventure of working in Asia as well as the chance to gain
experience in a region that is increasingly important to U.S. companies.
Knowledge of Asia, especially China, could help propel their careers, they
believe. Another draw, especially for entrepreneurial types, is the chance
to get in on the ground floor of new businesses and potentially earn big
sums or quickly move up the ranks.
Erin White, "For M.B.A. Students, A Good Career Move Means a Job in Asia,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 10, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111568193479528701,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
MBA graduates prefer a job in hand and a
fatter paycheck
When they envision their dream jobs, most M.B.A.
students don't get all starry-eyed and idealistic. Instead, they take a very
pragmatic view and set their sights on the companies that happen to be
paying the most and hiring the most. That attitude is apparent in the
results of a new survey that asked M.B.A.s to name their "ideal" employers.
In the annual study, students awarded higher popularity scores this year to
nearly all of the management-consulting and financial-services companies,
many of which have flocked back to campus with more jobs and fatter
paychecks. While they have traditionally been magnets for M.B.A.s, banks and
consultants became scarce on campus during the bleak job market of the past
few years, and some dropped in the ranking produced by Universum
Communications, a research and consulting firm that surveyed more than 4,700
M.B.A.s at 50 U.S. schools.
"Students Drawn to Firms With Jobs, Fatter Paychecks," The Wall Street
Journal, May 10, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111568211032928708,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Health Updates
Antioxidant Advantage Antioxidants help defend our bodies from heart
disease, cancer, and perhaps even the ravages of age ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/105/107775?z=1727_00000_2002_hv_06
Eating low-fat
dairy products may help slightly lower the risk of developing diabetes, a
new study of more than 40,000 middle-aged men suggests. Each additional
serving of low-fat dairy per day resulted in a 9% drop in risk. The link
could be due to whey proteins or magnesium, ingredients thought to enhance
the action of insulin in regulating blood sugar.
"Dairy May Cut Diabetes Risk in Men," The Wall Street Journal, May
10, 2005, Page D3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111565796924528338,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Jensen Comment: Watch the wording. This does not me that 12 servings a day
eliminates the risk.
A brief history of pain ---
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/PainManagement/story?i
From the National Institute of Health
More than you wanted to know about health (and vitamins, food, etc.) ---
http://ods.od.nih.gov/
Time Magazine Cover Story: Female
midlife crisis ---
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101050516/sowallis.html
New findings about diet and fat
Scientists found that in mice, old fat stuck around
when the liver had no new fat to process. The results are further evidence
that extreme diets often aren't the ticket to a lean body, and a balanced
diet is likely important for more reasons than scientists currently
understand. "Extremes of diet are sometimes unwise, because a balanced diet
may be critical for providing certain dietary signals that allow you to
respond appropriately to stresses, and one of those stresses is eating too
much," said Dr. Clay Semenkovich, a professor of medicine, cell biology and
physiology at the University of Washington and co-author of the study.
Kristen Philipkoski, "Eat Fat to Lose Fat," Wired News, May 10, 2005
---
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,67473,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_5
Jensen Comment: This does not mean eat a lot of fat, and diabetics should
be especially careful. One doctor uses the following analogy for diabetics
in terms of penetration of the liver: Sugar is a golf ball, carbohydrates
are softballs, and fat is a soccer ball.old
Are you being paid while reading this?
Are there too many Internet diversions while on the job?
Of the employees using the Internet at work,
51% access nonwork sites for about one to five hours a week; 5%, six to 10
hours; and 2%, 11 hours or more. An average of 3.4 hours a week was spent at
such sites by each employee, a slight increase from 3.3 hours in the
year-earlier poll. Although Internet use has increased, according to the
survey, the percentage of employees spending time at nonwork-related sites
has remained about the same, at 58% in the current survey, compared with 59%
a year ago.
Richard Breeden, "More Employees Are Using the Web at Work," The Wall
Street Journal, May 10, 2005; Page B4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111568290069528740,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Worrisome Ailment in Medicine: Misleading
Journal Articles
Doctors and patients who rely on articles in
prestigious medical journals for information about drugs have a problem: The
articles don't always tell the full story. Some omit key findings of trials
about a drug's safety and efficacy or inconvenient details about how a
trial's design changed partway through. A study published in the Journal of
the American Medical Association last year reviewed 122 medical-journal
articles and found that 65% of findings on harmful effects weren't
completely reported. It also found gaps in half the findings on how well
treatments worked.
Anna Wilde Mathews, "Worrisome Ailment in Medicine: Misleading Journal
Articles: Editors Demand More Data To Ensure Full Disclosure Of Drug Risks,
Trial Gaps Sarbanes-Oxley for Professors," The Wall Street Journal,
May 10, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111567633298328568,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
PwC hires more
accounting graduates than ever before
In 2005 we have hired over 3,100 students for
full-time positions across all of our lines of service. This represents a
17% increase over 2004 and 68% over 2002. This year we will also have over
2,000 interns. As accounting educators, PwC appreciates the important role
you play in providing this excellent talent to us.
May 5, 2005 message from PwC News
Knowledge Trails: Thinking in circles
For decades, computer researchers have experimented
with the idea of displaying textual information in visual maps, but the
concept has been slow to find practical applications. Now, one of the
pioneering companies in the field is hoping that by making its software
available as part of a standard Web browser it will be able to wean surfers
away from the simple ranked lists of search results offered by Google and
Yahoo.
John Markoff, "Your Internet Search Results, in the Round," The New York
Times, May 9, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/09/technology/09yahoo.html?
This is a lot like the "Knowledge Trails"
innovation invented by Fathom. It is very sad that Fathom could not get the
funding to make the Knowledge Trails a reality, because this would have been
one of the most useful integrative concepts in the history of knowledge ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/portals.htm#Fathom
Terrorist Information: Thinking visually
A new generation of software called Starlight
3.0, developed for the Department of Homeland Security by the Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), can unravel the complex web of
relationships between people, places, and events. And other new software can
even provide answers to unasked questions. Anticipating terrorist activity
requires continually decoding the meaning behind countless emails, Web
pages, financial transactions, and other documents, according to Jim Thomas,
director of the National Visualization and Analytics Center (NVAC) in
Richland, Washington. Anticipating terrorist activity requires continually
decoding the meaning behind countless emails, Web pages, financial
transactions, and other documents, according to Jim Thomas, director of the
National Visualization and Analytics Center (NVAC) in Richland, Washington.
Federal agencies participating in terrorism prevention monitor computer
networks, wiretap phones, and scour public records and private financial
transactions into massive data repositories.
John Gartner, "A Vision of Terror," MIT's Technology Review, May 10,
2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_051005gartner.asp?trk=nl
Sociology professor designs SAGrader
software for grading student essays
Student essays always seem to be riddled with the
same sorts of flaws. So sociology professor Ed Brent decided to hand the
work off to a computer. Students in Brent's Introduction to Sociology course
at the University of Missouri-Columbia now submit drafts through the
SAGrader software he designed. It counts the number of points he wanted his
students to include and analyzes how well concepts are explained. And within
seconds, students have a score. It used to be the students who looked for
shortcuts, shopping for papers online or pilfering parts of an assignment
with a simple Google search. Now, teachers and professors are realizing that
they, too, can tap technology for a facet of academia long reserved for a
teacher alone with a red pen. Software now scores everything from routine
assignments in high school English classes to an essay on the GMAT, the
standardized test for business school admission. (The essay section just
added to the Scholastic Aptitude Test for the college-bound is graded by
humans). Though Brent and his two teaching assistants still handle final
papers and grades students are encouraged to use SAGrader for a better shot
at an "A."
"Computers Now Grading Students' Writing," ABC News, May 8, 2005 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=737451
Jensen Comment: Aside from some of the obvious advantages such as grammar
checking, students should have a more difficult time protesting that the
grading is subjective and unfair in terms of the teacher's alleged favored
versus less-favored students. Actually computers have been used for some
time in grading essays, including the GMAT graduate admission test ---
http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=723
Also see The Washington Post account
at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/07/AR2005050700686.html
References to computer grading of essays ---
http://coeweb.fiu.edu/webassessment/references.htm
You can read about PEG at
http://snipurl.com/PEGgrade
Bob Jensen's threads on assessment are at
http://www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=723
Count the Zeros: U.S. debt increasing by
$1,000,000,000 per day
"WHAT IS ALAN GREENSPAN SO UPSET ABOUT" from a May 10 email message from
Mike Gasior
[Mike_Gasior@mail.vresp.com]
For those of you who
have not been keeping close track of Alan Greenspan's Chairmanship of
the Federal Reserve, term limits will require him to retire on January
31st of 2006. Many people, including myself, consider him to be the most
powerful Fed Chair there has ever been; and he has extended his power
far beyond what has typically been the mandate for the central bank.
When looked at simply, the Federal Reserve actually seems quite limited
in power with their influence simply expressed through their
administration of two benign overnight interest rates. The Discount
Rate, which is the rate at which member banks can borrow directly from
the Federal Reserve, and the Fed Funds Rate at which member banks lend
each other money. What is impressive to consider is how Alan Greenspan
has leveraged his reputation and agenda to become one of the most
influential forces in government for much of the past two decades. What
drives him crazy is the direction the U.S. economy is heading as he
nears the end of his very long run and how badly his own party has let
him down.
After 18 years, five
months and 21 days in office he will gather his things from his office
for the final time and walk away with whatever legacy history has in
store for him. And how do things looks as his final day approaches:
--The U.S. Federal
budget deficit is exploding and the government's debt is increasing at
over a billion dollars every single day.
--The dollar is falling
in value.
--The future burden of
Social Security and Medicare is something Greenspan has referred to
privately as "a crisis on wings" and only grows more serious daily.
How can you get
around the expense of buying MS Office for your home computers?
OpenOffice is the fruit of a collaboration between
Sun Microsystems and volunteer programmers around the world. Sun bought a
German company in 1999 to get office software to bundle with its computers
but figured that it wasn't going to make big bucks selling the software to a
wider market because of Microsoft's grip. So it released portions of the
code to the public. It probably didn't hurt that archrival Microsoft loathes
the idea of free software. The first version of OpenOffice, released in
2002, attempted to imitate Office as closely as possible but fell short. It
didn't open all Word documents properly, its spreadsheets could not be as
big as Excel's and it completely lacked a database program to match Access.
It wasn't a success. The beta of version 2 fixes many of those problems. It
opens Word, WordPerfect and Excel files flawlessly. Saved files open fine on
Microsoft programs. It also adds a database program that's similar to
Access.
Peter Svensson, "Review: OpenOffice a Strong Competitor, The Washington
Post, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/06/AR2005050600359.html
The failing Outlook
The chief drawback of OpenOffice is that it still
lacks an equivalent to Microsoft's excellent Outlook e-mail and calendar
program. This need not be a fatal flaw. If you're fine with a simple e-mail
program, you can download the free Thunderbird program from
www.mozilla.org . If
you need more features, just buy Microsoft Outlook for $109. That's still a
lot cheaper than buying the entire Standard Edition Office suite for $399.
(Of course, the Office edition for students and teachers costs $149, and no
one's checking IDs). My colleagues and I encountered some other problems
with OpenOffice. Installation was difficult on some machines because
OpenOffice relies on Sun's Java software, which does not come pre-installed
on all Windows PCs (it's available for free from http:java.sun.com). Write
crashed a few times while saving documents, but we were able to recover the
files. Hopefully, this is an issue that will be solved in the final version.
Edward N. Albro, "First Look: Orb Offers Easy Media Streaming," PC World
via The Washington Post, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050401834.html?referrer=email
Jensen Comment:
OpenOffice details are given at
http://www.collab.net/media/pdfs/openoffice_success.pdf
Phillips' wrongheaded the critique
A persistent theme of some critics
of the Iraq war -- again ascendant during the past few weeks
of violence -- has been the Bush administration's alleged
failure to appease the Baath Party and other elements of
Saddam Hussein's former regime. One of the more visible
exponents of this point of view has been David L. Phillips
of the Council on Foreign Relations. But his "Losing Iraq"
(Westview, 292 pages, $25) reveals just how hollow and
wrongheaded the critique really is.
Robert L. Pollack, "The Armchair Analyst," The Wall
Street Journal, May 10, 2005, Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111567764466328593,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
The complexity and
viciousness of politics
Blumenthal claims the religious
right is "a highly ecumenical group, united on some issues
of morality and politics but deeply divided on matters of
faith. The thought that they could ever agree enough to
impose a theocracy is laughable." In 2002, pointing to a
series of similar missteps by writers for The Nation,
we asked
http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=95001757 :
"Is it possible that The Nation, that venerable
left-wing magazine, has been infiltrated by right-wing moles
who are acting like idiots in an effort to discredit the
left?" The question seems as pertinent as ever.
Opinion Journal, May 10, 2005
MasterCard is making some
effort to prevent identity theft
For nearly a year, the company has
been striving to close down Web sites that sell or share
stolen MasterCard credit-card information, and "phishing" or
"spoof" sites that use MasterCard's name or logo to trick
consumers into divulging confidential information. Since
last June, the company has detected 35,045 MasterCard
numbers for sale or trade on the Internet, and has shuttered
766 sites trafficking in such information. It has closed
down 1,378 phishing sites.
Mitchell Pacelle, "How MasterCard Fights Against Identity
Thieves," The Wall Street Journal, May 9, 2005; Page
B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111559589681527765,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Bob Jensen's threads on identity theft and phishing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#SpecialSection
A former Marxist is
shaking up the liberal establishment in academe
David Horowitz, one of the
country's most famous converts to conservatism, is waging a
one-man war against the academy. Liberal college students,
he says, see their views reflected in textbooks . . . His
kids, as he calls conservative students, have to subscribe
to The National Review to get a balanced view of the world.
So nearly every day, he is on the road, promoting his
"academic bill rights"--a set of principles that he says
will make universities more intellectually diverse and
tolerant of conservatives. If he is lucky, maybe the next
generation will read his name in its textbooks . . . Mr.
Bowen fears that if those legislators do pass the bill, it
will "put a monitor in classrooms," increase the role of
government, and make litigation at the college and
university level more frequent and more prevalent. Todd
Gitlin, now a professor of journalism and sociology at
Columbia, also has a problem with the bill as legislation.
The actual text of it is fine, say says, "If it came across
my desk as a petition, I'd probably sign it." But "the
attempt to rope legislatures into enforcing rules of
fairness and decorum on university campuses is misguided and
perverse."
Jennifer Jacobson, "What Makes David Run," The Chronicle
of Higher Education, May 6, 2005, Page A9.
Jensen Comment: To date sixteen states have proposed some
form of the legislation on the Academic Bill of Rights
William & Mary Apology
The College of William & Mary has
apologized for and rescinded the dismissal of one dormitory
housekeeper and the placement on probation of another,
reported the Hampton Roads
Daily Press. The housekeepers were punished for talking to
reporters about the recent suicides of two students. Their
supervisor said that they were not allowed to talk to
reporters, but Timothy J. Sullivan, the college’s president,
said that the college did not have such a ban.
"William & Mary Apology," Inside Higher Ed, May 9,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/09/qt
WHEN CONFLICT GETS
PERSONAL
It is going to happen. Sooner or later, you'll find
yourself at loggerheads with a co-worker, or you'll be dragged into somebody
else's quarrel. You'll hear gossip or, worse yet, become the target of
gossip. Or you may find yourself subjected to language, a dirty joke, or
offensive comments that disturb you. No matter what form it takes, a
situation like this is a real test of your mettle as a mature adult. How
should you respond when a co-worker makes blatantly sexist or racist
remarks, calls you (or someone you know who is trustworthy) a ''liar" or a
''cheat," or treats co-workers and subordinates with snobbish and arrogant.
Peggy and Peter Post, "Questions of etiquette, and answers," Boston Globe,
May 8, 2005 ---
http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2005/05/08/questions_of_etiquette_and_answers/
Update on stem cell
research ---
http://www.boston.com/news/science/stemcell/
How can you access
your multimedia files that are too big to carry around on your laptop?
If you've got a big collection of digital music and
video, you know that bringing it with you when you roam can be a hassle.
Large media files can quickly overload a notebook's hard drive and they
certainly won't fit on most cell phones or PDAs. That's where Orb Networks
comes in. The Web-based service streams music, video, and photos from your
Windows XP PC to other Web-connected devices, including any notebook, many
PDAs (generally including PocketPCs, but not Palms), and Microsoft
Smartphone cell phones. If your home PC has a TV tuner, you can even watch
live television on your portable device. I tested the service--which
recently changed from charging a $10 monthly fee to offering free
accounts--using both a notebook and a Nokia 6620 cell phone. I found that it
worked remarkably well for such a new technology. To access your content,
you first download and install the Orb application on the PC that will be
hosting your files. From your mobile device, you can then sign into your
account on the Orb Web site and access your files through a Spartan, but
clear folder system. In addition to showing the media files on your own PC,
Orb shows you content (some free, some paid) from providers such as Audible
and Beatport. The company plans to make money by selling customers content.
Orb uses the processing power of your host Windows PC to scale your content
so the service can transport it over the network you're using and fits it on
your portable device's screen.
Edward N. Albro, "First Look: Orb Offers Easy Media Streaming," PC World
via The Washington Post, May 4, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050401834.html?referrer=email
Jensen Comment: Of course for your laptop you can always carry quite a lot
of multimedia on CD or DVD disks.
Accountants are going to brush up on the
accounting rules for bartered transactions
Three New York doctors were charged on Thursday
with giving large amounts of Viagra and other anti-impotence drugs to mob
members in return for construction and auto repair work done by
mafia-controlled businesses. Arlen Fleisher, Stephen Klass and George
Shapiro, all doctors in Westchester County, a suburban area north of New
York City, were accused of trading prescription drugs and drug samples with
members and associates of the Gambino crime family. The one-count complaint
was filed in Manhattan federal court.
"Viagra for the mob? This can't turn out well...," Reuters, May 5, 2005 ---
tp://snipurl.com/UprightMob
Wise Woman Whips Wal-Mart Whopper
When Bobbie Faler answered her phone Tuesday
morning, she heard an offer that seemed too good to be true. The caller said
that for Wal-Mart's 25th anniversary, he was giving away $200 worth of
coupons, in $10 and $20 denominations that could be redeemed for cash. All
Faler had to do was give him her checking account number. "I told him I
didn't think anyone who made less than $40,000 a year should have a checking
account," Faler said, adding that she doesn't have one. The caller said he
would have someone call her back with information on where to send a money
order. She said the caller spoke with a heavy accent, but she couldn't
identify it. Faler didn't take the bait. Instead, she called Wal-Mart and
was told that the call was a scam.
Jessica Lowell, "Wal-Mart coupon scam targets local resident," Wyoming
Tribune-Eagle, May 7, 2005 ---
http://www.wyomingnews.com/news/more.asp?StoryID=105141
Investment advice from a Wharton
professor
(Be leery of equity investment advice from anybody since, unlike a casino,
the stock market is a non-stationary game of chance. It's a game of chance
with constantly changing probabilities and inside players)
Siegel's investment strategy can be summed up in
two steps. First, shun all the high-priced stocks that sell at a premium
multiple to the Standard & Poor's 500 stock average. That adage would have
been useful in 2000 when Jack Welch's General Electric (nyse: GE - news -
people ) was priced at an unsustainable 50 times earnings. It would have led
you to sell AIG (nyse: AIG - news - people ) when the insurance giant was 26
times earnings, far higher than the earnings multiple of most other
insurance companies. Celebrated CEOs won't make you rich. And, writes
Siegel, "Not a single technology or telecommunications company performed
well for investors." Second, buy the stocks that Siegel calls the "El
Dorados," well-known household name companies that have been around a long
time and pay ever-rising cash dividends. In fact--and here is the staggering
insight Siegel has--if you consistently reinvest the dividends paid by the
El Dorados, over a long period of time you will get rich. "Without
reinvesting dividends, the average annual after-inflation return on stocks
falls from 7% to 4.5%--a drop of over a third," Siegel writes.
Robert Lezner, "Stocks For The Long-Ago Run," Forbes, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.forbes.com/2005/05/06/cz_rl_0506siegelbookreview.html
Jensen Comment: Jeremy J. Siegel's new book is The Future for Investors,
Why the Tried and the True Triumph Over the Bold and the New, (Crown
Business, $27.50
The other eBay
The number of people who use Craigslist.org is
expanding at more than 100 percent per year _ a growth rate any venture
capitalist would covet. But the people who run the 10-year-old community Web
site, which gets 8 million unique users and more than 2 billion page views
per month, seem to have little interest in exploiting new sources of
revenue, going public or even adding to their 18-person staff.The
bare-bones site _ a trusted resource for everything from finding roommates
to selling used cars in 105 cities in 23 countries, charges for very few
classifieds, doesn't serve up traditional ads and plans no major changes to
its business model. Instead, founder Craig Newmark told Associated
Press editors and writers in a bureau visit, his newest fascination is
community journalism. Newmark hopes to develop a pool of "talented amateurs"
who could investigate scandals, cover politics and promote the most
important and credible stories. Articles would be published on Internet
sites ranging from Craigslist to individual Web logs, or blogs.
Rachel Konrad, "Craigslist.org Founder Eyes Journalism," The Washington
Post, May 7, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/07/AR2005050700611.html
The Washington Post trivia question on May
10, 2005
Craigslist.org gets more than 4 million
classified ads and 1 million forum postings each month. How many people work
at the site?
A.
1,800
B.
800
C.
180
D.
18
Workplace far from democracy
The workplace is not a democracy. Instead, it is
filled with layers of command. That's the informed opinion of Harold J.
Leavitt of Pasadena, Calif., a retired professor of organizational behavior
at the graduate school of business at Stanford University. "Hierarchy, that
oldest and most controlling attribute of large human organizations,
shouldn't just go on and on, but it does," said Leavitt, who has a doctorate
in social psychology and is a lecturer, consultant and author. His newest
book addresses this concern: It's titled "Top Down: Why hierarchies are
here to stay and how to manage them more effectively" (Harvard Business
School Press, $29.95).
Carol Kleiman, "Workplace far from democracy," Chicago Tribune, April
28, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ChicagoTribApril28
National Geographic's Strange Days on
Planet Earth
http://www.pbs.org/strangedays/index_flash.html
Teaming up with PBS, National Geographic has
created an intriguing four-part documentary series titled "Strange Days on
Planet Earth" that is meant to explore a number of events and processes
(such as climatic change and invasive species) and their long- and
short-term effects across the planet. Hosted by actor Edward Norton, the
series producer's have also created this complementary website where
interested parties can learn more about these processes. For example, in the
"One Degree Factor" section (which explores global climatic change), users
can read interviews with experts working in this field and also learn about
the relevance of this process to their own lives. The site also contains a
nice glossary of terms and a place where individuals can offer their own
comments on the program.
Quoted from the Scout Report on May 5, 2005
A scam becomes big time in Japan
Many Japanese haven't been as fortunate. This
nation, which boasts a low crime rate, is in a panic about a scam in which
criminal groups act out highly orchestrated dramas over the phone. The crime
has become so widespread it even has its own name: the oreore (pronounced
oray-oray) sagi, or, "It's me! It's me!" swindle. Most scams include a crook
pretending to be a relative, sobbing, "It's me!" hoping the intended victim
lets a name slip. Since the scam first started appearing two years ago, the
number of cases has skyrocketed. Last year, at least 14,874 victims handed
over about $180 million, police officials say. Other incidents are believed
to go uncounted because victims are too ashamed to report the crime. The
single biggest reported loss was a man who paid $120,000. Similar scams have
appeared in other countries. But they are particularly elaborate -- and
successful -- here because of a schism between Japan's traditional ways of
settling disputes and a recent push to create a more transparent,
contract-based legal system. For most Japanese, Western law remains an alien
notion. Many retain a deep-seated reluctance to resolve disputes in public
and prefer to settle matters behind closed doors to avoid shame to the
family. In Japan, a nation of 127.6 million people, there were 570,000 civil
lawsuits last year, fewer than the 720,000 in the U.S. state of Georgia,
which has 8.6 million people.
Martin Fackler, "An Insurance Scam Taps Japan's Fears At Great Expense:
Victims Pay After Receiving Calls About Fake Mishaps; The Dread of
Humiliation 'Dummy! It's That Swindle'," The Wall Street Journal,
May 6, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111532143682626024,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
It's beyond me why anybody does business
with Morgan Stanley
Morgan Stanley's past actions hardly inspire
confidence that the firm can be relied upon to analyze the legal potential
of the documents. All Wall Street firms play hardball when clients bring
arbitration cases. But Morgan Stanley is famous for its scorched-earth
tactics. The firm often stonewalls routine requests for documents and stalls
even when arbitration panelists order that materials be produced. During an
October 2003 arbitration, for example, Morgan Stanley was penalized $10,000
a day until it complied with an order that documents be produced. "Enough is
enough," the arbitration panel wrote. Morgan Stanley seems similarly
obstructionist in its dealings with regulators. New Hampshire's securities
department last month cited it for "improper and inadequate production of
documents" in a case involving allegations of improper sales. Jeffrey Spill,
deputy director of the state's Bureau of Securities Regulation, said in a
statement: "What we have seen is a consistent pattern of delay and
obfuscation in relation to document production, in addition to inadequate
recordkeeping, both here in New Hampshire and in other jurisdictions."
Morgan Stanley settled the case W.A.O.D.W. - without admitting or denying
wrongdoing.
Gretchen Morgenson, "All That Missing E-Mail ... It's Baaack," The New
York Times, May 8, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/08/business/yourmoney/08gret.html
Bob Jensen's threads on frauds by brokers and investment bankers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Al-Jazeera becomes a boon for
Bush
From its headquarters, dispersed among cramped
trailers, air-conditioned tents and a squat box of a building on a dusty lot
crawling with stray cats, an unlikely ally has emerged in this desert
capital for the Bush administration's new Middle East democracy campaign --
al-Jazeera. The Arab world's most-watched satellite channel has been reviled
in Washington since it began airing Osama bin Laden tapes and footage of
insurgent strikes on U.S. troops in Iraq. Yet as the Bush administration
struggles to design a public diplomacy program for its democracy campaign,
al-Jazeera has become a leading vehicle for the region's budding reform
movements.
Robin Wright, "Al-Jazeera Puts Focus on Reform Mideast Coverage by Network
Reviled in Washington Is Boon for Bush," Washington Post, May 8, 2005
---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/07/AR2005050701031.html
In Pursuit of Arab Reform ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/967715B8-276C-4708-AC08-7FD102E13BA7.htm
Another CEO Scam
Forget the standard corporate apartment,
available to many out-of-town employees. Today, the smart executive
traveling frequently between two locales owns or personally rents his
out-of-town digs -- and gets paid for staying there. Employers are
reimbursing executives for staying in their own second homes at a time when
many have deemed company-owned residences too expensive to maintain. Though
fairly common in the media, entertainment, banking and retail industries,
the arrangement largely remained below the radar screen until recently.
Facing heightened pressure from regulators and investors for greater details
about executive rewards, several major corporations described this perk for
the first time in their 2005 proxy statements.
Joann S. Lublin, "Some Visiting CEOs Get Paid To Stay in Residences They
Own," The Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111534085959426451,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Bob Jensen's updates on frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
It used to be they all wanted to be
Napoleon
With patriotism at a high plateau of late, the
U.S. military currently receives a level of respect not seen since World War
II. Unlike the Vietnam War era, today even those who oppose the war in Iraq
profess to be staunch supporters of the men and women who serve there. The
heightened admiration has given way to a growing number of military
impostors, and in turn sparked an impassioned group of crusaders determined
to expose the mock heros who festoon themselves with unearned medals. The
FBI's Mr. Cottone estimates that for every actual Navy Seal today, at least
300 people falsely claim to be one. The Congressional Medal of Honor Society
in Mount Pleasant, S.C., suspects that the number of people who falsely
claim to have received a Medal of Honor is more than double the 124 living
recipients.
Amy Chozick, "Veterans' Web Sites Expose Pseudo Heroes, Phony Honors,"
The Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111533986173926430,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
More incentives for those phony
diplomas: Why not focus more on performance at hand?
Full-time community college faculty members are
making only a little more money than they did last year, according to new
data from the College and University Professional Association for Human
Resources. The average full-time faculty member earned $52,134 in 2004-5, up
from $50,998 the previous year. CUPA and the American Association of
University Professors are the main sources of faculty salary data, and they
collect data in different ways. The AAUP recently released this year’s data
and found an average salary of $52,862. CUPA did not release much detail
about its survey, and it does not provide institution-by-institution
averages, as the AAUP does. But CUPA asked the colleges in its survey to
identify “the primary basis for determining compensation” for full-time
faculty members. The results indicate much more of an emphasis on degrees
attained than on factors commonly emphasized at four-year institutions.
Scott Jaschik, "Modest Increases," Inside Higher Ed, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/06/ccsalary
Our Ph.D. Deficit: federal funding for
research in the physical sciences and engineering has been stagnant
To keep feeding America's great innovation machine,
robust investments in research are a must. Unfortunately, federal funding
for research in the physical sciences and engineering has been stagnant for
two decades in inflation-adjusted dollars. As a percentage of GDP, federal
investment in physical science research is half of what it was in 1970. The
technologies listed above came from decades-old research. A flatlined
research budget won't produce the same economic growth for tomorrow. Nor
will it keep us ahead of the competition much longer. Through investment in
research and education, our competitors have increased their numbers of
science and engineering Ph.D.s. It's no wonder that foreign applications for
U.S. patents are growing remarkably and that the foreign high-tech labor
force is drawing jobs away from America. In China, R&D expenditures rose
350% between 1991 and 2001, and the number of science and engineering Ph.D.s
soared 535%. In South Korea, R&D expenditures increased more modestly -- by
220% -- and Ph.D.s by 150%. In that same period, the number of applications
for U.S. patents from each country grew by 400%. Publications in scientific
journals provide another indicator of the global challenge to our scientific
primacy. In 1986, the U.S. share of articles in such journals world-wide was
39%. By 2001 it had slipped to 31%, and it is still declining.
Norman R. Augustine and Burton Richter, "Our Ph.D. Deficit," The Wall
Street Journal, May 4, 2005; Page A18 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111517668080624207,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Monarch butterflies
making their annual migration from the eastern United States to winter
residences in Mexico's Sierra Madre mountain range find their way by
following a three-dimensional map made of rays of polarized ultraviolet
light, a study has found ---
http://news.yahoo.com/s/latimests/20050507/ts_latimes/butterfliesnavigateusingmapofuvlightstudyfinds
When you're in a hole don't keep digging
A woman pleaded guilty to helping her husband
fake his own death by digging up a corpse from a cemetery and then staging a
fiery car accident in which the body was burned beyond recognition.
Molly Daniels pleaded guilty Tuesday to insurance fraud and hindering
apprehension. She faces a maximum of 20 years in prison. Her husband,
Clayton Wayne Daniels, is in custody pending trial on arson charges.
According to allegations in court records, Clayton Daniels dug up a body
from a graveyard, placed it in his car and set the car on fire in June,
burning the body beyond recognition.
Los Angeles Times, May 7, 2005 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/s/latimests/20050505/ts_latimes/womanpleadsguiltyingraverobbingforfraud
LISTEN TO EINSTEIN'S VOICE
The British Library has released a CD containing
clips from talks and lectures given by Einstein. We have two samples to
listen to on the site, try them out and find out some more fascinating facts
about Einstein.
Einstein Year 2005 ---
http://www.einsteinyear.org/
Changing economic status and demographics
for the good
The Washington Times reports: "Congressional Black Caucus members no longer
vote lock step with each other and the Democratic Party, reflecting a
significant change in the economic status and demographics of their
constituents and their own political aspirations."
Opinion Journal, May 5, 2005
Reverse thinking
Two Canadian ecologists at the University of
Windsor in Ontario have been studying the way that Internet viruses
proliferate to better determine the progress of a real-world intruder -- the
spiny water flea, an insect that's native to Russia that has been invading
the Canadian lake system for two decades. Their approach might seem, well, a
little buggy. But Professor Hugh MacIsaac and graduate student Jim Muirhead
published a paper in March on their work in the British Ecological Society's
Journal of Applied Ecology which says that by applying the rules of network
theory and taking insights from how information spreads across the Internet,
they've constructed a picture of the way their ecological interloper
operates.
Karen Epper Hoffman, "The 'Nature' of Net Viruses," MIT's Technology
Review, May 6, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/wo/wo_050505hoffman.asp?trk=nl
Ex-Enron Broadband Engineer Recounts
Chaos
An engineer hired to fix problems in Enron Corp.'s
broadband unit testified Thursday that the division suffered from overall
disarray and that his corrective efforts were met with internal resistance.
John Bloomer, who had previously spent 18 years with General Electric Co.,
told jurors in the trial of five former executives of the broadband unit
that he found some "disturbing things" when he "peeked under the covers"
after arriving at Enron Broadband Services in 1999.
Associated Press, "Ex-Enron Broadband Engineer Recounts Chaos," The
Washington Post, May 5, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/05/AR2005050502014.html
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
Roosevelt’s 1935 original Social
Security plan included private accounts
Bush's new Social Security proposal is in line with
what FDR really wanted
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s original Social Security plan included
provisions that would have allowed people to make personal investments - not
altogether different from the private accounts that President Bush is
currently proposing. In fact, this was one of three “necessary principles”
in FDR’s
legislative package presented to Congress on
January 17, 1935.
"Roosevelt’s Social Security plan included private accounts," The
American Thinker, May 9. 2005 ---
http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id=4481
Outsourcing rules, regulations, and
opportunities ---
http://www.deftpro.com/
(Scott Bonacker forwarded the above link.)
May 9, 2005 reply from Richard Campbell
You should check
out
www.elance.com (which is a part of ebay) and
see how accounting services are outsourced. You can also see how you
could become a part of the seller network for accounting services. You
have to pay-to-play, though. The number of leads you get from elance is
dependent on your level of contribution.
Booze Ban at Berkeley
The University of California at Berkeley on Monday imposed a ban on alcohol
at all fraternity and sorority events. Karen Kenney, dean of students, said
the ban was prompted by “an alarming increase in problems with alcohol
abuse, hazing, fights and badly managed parties at all types of Greek
organizations.”
Doug Lederman, "Booze Ban at Berkeley," Inside Higher Ed, May 10,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/05/10/qt
Yahoo's new music rental service
In an aggressive attempt to broaden the
online-music business, Yahoo Inc. today plans to roll out a new low-priced
service that allows listeners to rent songs rather than buy them outright.
The service, dubbed Yahoo Music Unlimited, will give music fans unlimited
access to more than a million songs from artists including Bruce
Springsteen, Gwen Stefani and 50 Cent, for $6.99 a month. Yahoo also will
offer an annual subscription for $60 -- about the cost of four or five CDs.
Songs become unplayable when consumers let their subscriptions expire. The
service, which lets users transfer the songs to select portable MP3-format
music players, is priced far below major rivals' services: RealNetworks
Inc., for example, charges $179 a year for its comparable subscription
service.
Kevin J. Delaney, "Yahoo's Big Play In Online Music: Internet Giant Aims to
Shake Up Nascent Industry With Subscription Rates Well Below Rivals',"
The Wall Street Journal, May 11, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111575587704729540,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Sometimes it's hard to be forgiving
In a case of shocking brutality, a mentally ill
Brooklyn man whose decomposed body was found hacked in two on Thursday was
chained almost nightly before his death last year because relatives were
enraged by his bedwetting, a law enforcement source said yesterday. Then
they stole from him, the source said. Diane Ahmed, 41, and her husband Ahmed
Ahmed, 51, allegedly chained Diane's brother, Robert Heald, to doors and
radiators and also doused him with scalding water. They abused him for one
to two months after he left an adult-care facility and moved in with them,
the source said.
Robert Moore, "Abused, cut in 2, dumped," New York Daily News, May 7,
2005 ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/307313p-262867c.html
What turns deans on?
After 20 years of deaning at three
universities, private and public, I am now back in the classroom as a
full-time faculty member. My experience has convinced me that deaning is a
lot like baseball: long periods of routine punctuated with moments of high
drama, low comedy, or just plain craziness.
C.S. James, "A Dean’s Life — Part I," Inside Higher Ed, May 9, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/05/09/dean1
Accounting research is absolutely tame
(boring?) compared to this popular/unpopular sex acts research
The theme for the society's four-day conference
is "Unstudied, Understudied And Underserved Sexual Communities."
Presentations range from autoerotic asphyxiation, or "breath play," to
zoophiles, or animal lovers, to more mainstream topics like sex motives of
dating partners. "Let me tell you, it was not easy finding these pictures,"
Hunter College professor Jose E. Nanin told his audience in a seminar about
"specialized" sexual behavior among gay men. Nanin's photos are more than an
explicit how-to of exhibitionism and sadomasochism, he says; they are
examples of safe alternatives to sexual intercourse that need to be
de-stigmatized in order to fight diseases like HIV/ AIDS. Researchers say
their greater goal is to help the medical community, the public and
legislators figure out what behavior is merely out of the norm versus
downright dangerous.
Amy Kalin, "Sex researchers shed light on unpopular sex acts," Yahoo News,
May 9, 2005 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20050509/hl_nm/sex_dc_1
According to the Opinion Journal on
May 10, math research is becoming more exciting
The UC Berkeley math department
http://math.berkeley.edu/people_employment_academic.html's Web site says
the department has a "vice chair for faculty affairs." Now that might fall
under the category of dangerous sex.
What turns accountants on?
May 10, 2005 message from one of our best
The SEC announced
this week that on May 12 it will begin posting comment letters sent by
SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance and Division of Investment
Management to companies (and the companies’ response letters) relating
to disclosure filings made after 8/1/04. The comment letters and
responses will be posted in the Edgar filing section of the SEC’s
website
www.sec.gov
. The SEC states the process will commence by posting comment letters
and responses for some of the oldest eligible filings, but as it
continues, letters will be released no earlier than 45 days after the
review of the disclosure filing is complete. The May 9 press release is
available at:
http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2005-72.htm ;
the original press release issued June 24, 2004 announcing this
impending action is available at:
http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2004-89.htm and
comment letters sent in response to SEC’s June 24, 2004 announcement are
posted at:
http://www.sec.gov/news/press/s72804.shtml
.
This correspondence will
be interesting. I'm sure there are some research opportunities there.
Denny Beresford
University of Georgia
May 12, 2005 reply from Tom Hardy
[thardy@IVESINC.COM]
The comment letters will
be found under each company's list of filings on EDGAR. The form types
are UPLOAD for outgoing letters and CORRESP for incoming letters. As of
today there is just a single outgoing letter.
http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001140028
Tom Hardy
AuditAnalytics.com
thardy@ivesinc.com
508-476-7007 Ext. 28
From: Dimick, Roger
[mailto:dimickr@lit.edu]
Sent: Monday, May 09, 2005 7:42 AM
To: Jensen, Robert
Subject: Did I ever tell you...
That I do a trivia show on a
local station here in Beaumont? If you're still in San Antonio in July I'll
remind you because frequently the station is "hearable" over your way. It's
a 5,000 watt directional station, KLVI at AM 560. The show is a real hoot
and has been on for 12 years.
Your tidbits are right up my
alley!
Occasionally I'll take one
to class to share with my students who have all come to expect me to tell
them bad stories.
[Some personal parts of the message
deleted.]
Roger Dimick, CPA
Lamar Institute of Technology Beaumont, Texas
Is there a connection between Huxley and
Jensen?
There is a hint of regression about it — if not all the way back
to childhood, at least to preadolescent nerdishness.
"Information, Please," by Scott McLemee,
Inside Higher Ed, May 10, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/05/10/mclemee
People who met Aldous
Huxley would sometimes notice that, on any given day, the turns of his
conversation would follow a brilliant, unpredictable, yet by no means
random course. The novelist might start out by mentioning something
about Plato. Then the discussion would drift to other matters — to Poe,
the papacy, and the history of Persia, followed by musings on
photosynthesis. And then, perhaps, back to Plato.
So
Huxley’s friends would think: “Well, it’s pretty obvious
which volume of the Encyclopedia Britannica he
was reading this morning.”
Now,
it’s a fair guess that whoever recounted that story (to
the author of whichever biography I read it in) meant to
tell it at Huxley’s expense. It’s not just that it makes
him look like an intellectual magpie, collecting shiny
facts and stray threads of history. Nor even that his
erudition turns out to be pre-sorted and alphabetical.
Rather,
I suspect the image of an adult habitually meandering
through the pages of an encyclopedia carries a degree of
stigma. There is a hint of regression about it — if not
all the way back to childhood, at least to preadolescent
nerdishness.
If
anything, the taboo would be even sterner for a fully
licensed and bonded academic professional.
Encyclopedia entries are among the lowest form of
secondary literature. Very rare exceptions can be made
for cases such as Sigmund Freud’s entry on
“Psychoanalysis” in the 13th
edition of the Britannica, or Kenneth Burke’s
account of his own theory of dramatism in The
International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences.
You get a certain amount of credit for writing for
reference books — and more for editing them. And heaven
knows that the academic presses love to turn them out.
See, for example, The Encyclopedia of Religion in the
South (Mercer University Press), The Encyclopedia
of New Jersey (Rutgers University Press) and The
International Encyclopedia of Dance (Oxford
University Press), not to mention The Encyclopedia of
Postmodernism (Routledge).
It might
be okay to “look something up” in an encyclopedia or
some other reference volume. But read them? For
pleasure? The implication that you spend much time doing
so would be close to an insult — a kind of academic
lese majesty.
At
one level, the disdain is justified. Many such works
are sloppily written, superficial, and/or hopelessly
unreliable. The editors of some of them display all the
conscientiousness regarding plagiarism one would expect
of a failing sophomore. (They grasp the concept, but do
not think about it so much as to become an
inconvenience.)
But my
hunch is that social pressure plays a larger role in it.
Real scholars read monographs! The nature of an
encyclopedia is that it is, at least in principle, a
work of popularization. Probably less so for The
Encyclopedia of Algebraic Topology, assuming there
is one. But still, there is an aura of
anti-specialization and plebian accessibility that seems
implicit in the very idea. And there is something almost
Jacobin about organizing things in alphabetical order.
Well
then, it’s time. Let me confess it: I love reading
encyclopedias and the like, at least in certain moods.
My collection is not huge, but it gets a fair bit of
use.
Aside
from still-useful if not cutting- edge works such as the
four-volume Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(Macmillan, 1967) and Eric Partridge’s indispensible
Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English Origins
(Macmillan, 1958), I keep at hand any number of volumes
from Routledge and Blackwell offering potted summaries
of 20th century thinkers. (Probably by this time next
year, we’ll have the 21st century versions.)
Not long
ago, for a ridiculously small price, I got the four
paperbound volumes of the original edition of the
Scribners Dictionary of the History of Ideas,
first published in 1973 — the table of contents of which
is at times to bizarre as to seem like a practical joke.
There is no entry on aesthetics, but one called “Music
as Demonic Art” and another called “Music as a Divine
Art.” An entry called “Freedom of Speech in Antiquity”
probably ought to be followed with something that brings
things up to more recent times — but no such luck.
The whole thing is now available
online, with its goofy mixture
of the monographic ("Newton’s Opticks and
Eighteenth Century Imagination") and the clueless (no
entries on Aristotle or Kant, empiricism or
rationalism). But somehow the weirdness is more
enjoyable between covers.
And
then, of course, there is the mother of them all: the
Encyclopedia or Rational Dictionary of the Sciences,
Arts, and Crafts that Denis Diderot and friends
published in the 1750s and ’60s. Aside from a couple of
volumes of selections, I’ve grabbed every book by or
about Diderot in English that I’ve ever come across.
Diderot himself, appropriately enough, wrote the
entry for “Encyclopedia” for the Encyclopedia.
The aim
of such a work, he explained, is “to collect all the
knowledge scattered over the face of the earth, to
present its general structure to the men with whom we
live, and to transmit this to those who will come after
us, so that the work of past centuries may be useful to
the following centuries, that our children, by becoming
more educated, may at the same time become more virtuous
and happier, and that we may not die without having
deserved well of the human race.”
Yeah!
Now that’s something to shoot for. It even makes reading
encyclopedias seem less like a secret vice than a
profound obligation.
And if,
perchance, any of you share the habit — and have
favorite reference books that you keep at hand for
diversion, edification, or moral uplift — please pass
the titles along below....
May 10, 2005 reply from Kenny Easwaran
The Stanford
Encyclopedia of Philosophy (
http://plato.stanford.edu ) is a place I’ve
spent a lot of time just browsing! It’s at times frustrating to see that
half of the articles have yet to be written, but then I notice that the
number of articles (both completed and projected) has been growing
substantially over the past several years.
Please check on your bank account ---
http://www.scottstratten.com/movie.html
Pictures of Erika
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbits/2005/ErikaBits.htm
All the original Carpenters (sniff, sniff
We've Only Just Begun) ---
http://www.mymusicattic.org/Page19.html
Train of Life
(Willie Nelson and Patsy Cline)
---
http://mywebpages.comcast.net/singingman7/TOL.htm
Humor
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
A Three-year-old little boy was examining his testicles while taking a
bath.
"Mama," he asked, "Are these my brains?"
Mama answered, "Not yet!"
Ole and Sven were out fishing
in the boat when Ole felt a tug on his line. When he reeled in his catch he
discovered it was only an old lamp. While Ole was rubbing it dry there was a
sudden 'poof' and a genie appeared out of the lamp. "Thank for freeing me
from the lamp" said the genie. To show my gratitude I will grant you one
wish".
After thinking for a few
minutes Ole finally told the genie that his wish is for all of the water in
the lake to turn into beer. At Ole's request the genie raised his hands and
'poof', the entire lake turned into beer.
"Dat vas perty stupid!" said
Sven
"Vy vas dat so stupid?" asked
Ole
"Because," Sven replied, "now
ve gonna hafta pee in da boat."
Forwarded by Dick Haar
The Mafia's version of The Three Little Pigs
Once upon a time there were three little pigs. The straw pig, the stick pig
and the brick pig.
One day this nasty old wolf came up to the straw pig's house and said,
"I'm gonna huff and puff and blow your house down." And he did !!!
So the straw pig went running over to the stick pig's house and said,
"Please let me in, the wolf just blew down my house." So the stick Pig let
the straw pig in.
Just then the wolf showed up and said, "I'm gonna huff and puff and blow
your house down." And he did !!!
So the straw pig and the stick pig went running over to the brick pig's
house and said, "Let us in, let us in, the big bad wolf just blew our houses
down!"
So the brick pig let them in just as the wolf showed up. The wolf said,
"I'm gonna huff and puff and blow your house down." The straw pig and the
stick pig were so scared! But the brick pig picked up the phone and made a
call.
A few minutes passed and a big, black Caddy pulls up.
Out step two massive pigs in pin striped suits and fedora hats. These
pigs come over to the wolf, grab him by the neck and beat the living crap
out of him, then one of them pulled out a gun, stuck it in his mouth and
fired, killing the wolf, then they got back into their Caddy and drove off.
The straw pig and stick pig were amazed!!! "Who the hell were those
guys?" they asked.
"Those were my cousins... the Guinea Pigs."
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Are you a Katllick?
Three little boys were concerned because they couldn't get anyone to play
with them.
They decided it was because they had not been baptized and didn't go to
Sunday School.
So, they went to the nearest church. Only the janitor was there.
One said, "We need to be baptized because no one will come out and play
with us. Will you baptize us?"
"Sure," said the janitor. He took them into the bathroom and dunked their
heads in the toilet bowl, one at a time. Then he said, "Now go out and
play."
When they got outside, dripping wet, one of them asked, "What religion do
you think we are?"
The oldest one said, "Well, we're not Katlick, because they pour the
water on you.
We're not Babdiss because they dunk all of you in it.
We're not Methdiss because they just sprinkle you with it."
The littlest one said, "Didn't you smell that water?"
"Yeah! What do you think that means?" "I think it means we're
Pisscopalians.
Forwarded by Paula
A good time to keep your mouth shut is when you're in deep water.
How come it takes so little time for a child who is afraid of the dark to
become a teenager who wants to stay out all night?
Business conventions are important because they demonstrate how many
people a company can operate without.
Why is it that at class reunions you feel younger than everyone else
looks?
Scratch a dog and you'll find a permanent job.
No one has more driving ambition than the boy who wants to buy a car.
There are worse things than getting a call for a wrong number at 4 AM. It
could be a right number.
No one ever says, "It's only a game," when his team is winning.
Money will buy a fine dog, but only kindness will make him wag his tail.
The nicest thing about the future is that it always starts tomorrow.
If you don't have a sense of humor, you probably don't have any sense at
all.
Seat belts are not as confining as wheelchairs.
I've reached the age where happy hour is a nap.
Be careful reading the fine print. There's no way you're going to like
it.
The trouble with bucket seats is that not everybody has the same size
bucket.
To err is human, to forgive -- highly unlikely.
Do you realize that in about 40 years, we'll have thousands of old ladies
running around with tattoos? This is way scary.
Money can't buy happiness -- but somehow it's more comfortable to cry in
a Corvette than in a Yugo.
Here is the list that my MAcc students developed and that I submitted to
the Journal of Accountancy for the contest they are having.
Denny Beresford
Top Ten Reasons to Become a CPA
10. If you want a guy at a bar to leave you alone, tell him you’re a CPA
and that you’d love to do his taxes.
09. CPA is easier to spell than anesthesiologist.
08. You can say peek-a-boo without anyone looking at you funny.
07. CPA also stands for “Constantly Paid A Lot.”
06. If you liked casual Friday, wait until you try casual Saturdays and
Sundays.
05. Your kids will always be the first to count to 10 in their
kindergarten class.
04. There are only two sure things in this world – death and taxes. Thus,
the only two sure jobs are as an undertaker and an accountant.
03. In January through April you’ll always have an alibi for coming home
late.
02. You may be the only one at the table who can split up the check and
calculate the tip.
01. Thanks to clean SOX, no more “dirty laundry.”
Forwarded by Aaron Konstam
Notice from Microsoft:
It has come to our attention that a few copies of the Texas Edition of
Windows 98 may have accidentally been shipped outside of Texas. If you
have one of the Texas Editions you may need some help understanding the
commands.
The Texas Edition may be recognized by looking at the opening screen. It
reads WINDERS 98 with a background picture of the Alamo superimposed on
the Texas flag. It is shipped with a Leann Rimes screen saver.
Also note the "Recycle Bin" is labeled "Outhouse."
"My Computer" is called "This Infernal Contraption."
"Dialup Networking" is called "Good Ol' Boys."
"Control Panel" is known as "the Dashboard."
"Hard Drive" is referred to as "Wheel Drive."
"Floppies" are "Them Little Ol' Plastic Disc Thangs."
Other features: Instead of an "Error Message" you get a "Winder covered
with a garbage bag and duct tape."
Terminology:
OK = ats aww-right.
Cancel = hail no.
Reset = aw shoot.
Yes = shore.
No = Naaaa.
Find = hunt-fer it.
Go to = over yonder.
Back = back yonder.
Help = hep me out here.
Stop = ternit off.
Start = crank it up.
Settings = sittins.
Programs = stuff that does stuff.
Documents = stuff I done done.
Also note that Winders 98 does not recognize capital letters or
punctuation marks. We regret any inconvenience it may have caused if you
received a copy of the Texas Edition. You may return it to Microsoft for
a replacement version.
Philosophizing with Paula
My cleaner house is a sign of a broken computer
I don't do windows because I love birds and don't want one to run into a
clean window and get hurt.
I don't wax floors because . I am terrified a guest will slip and get
hurt then I'll feel terrible(plus they may sue me.)
I don't mind the dust bunnies because They are very good company, I have
named most of them, and they agree with everything I say.
I don't disturb cobwebs because I want every creature to have a home of
their own.
I don't Spring Clean because I love all the seasons and don't want the
others to get jealous.
I don't pull weeds in the garden because I don't want to get in God's
way, he is an excellent designer.
I don't put things away because My husband will never be able to find
them again.
I don't do gourmet meals when I entertain because I don't want my guests
to stress out over what to make when they invite me over for dinner.
I don't iron because I choose to believe them when they say "Permanent
Press".
I don't stress much on anything because "A-Type" personalities die young
and I want to stick around and become a wrinkled up crusty ol' woman!!!!
Forwarded by Dick Haar
The story goes: upon completing a highly dangerous tightrope walk over
Niagara Falls in appalling wind and rain, 'The Great Zumbrati' was met by an
enthusiastic supporter, who urged him to make a return trip, this time
pushing a wheelbarrow, which the spectactor had thoughtfully brought along.
The Great Zumbrati was reluctant, given the terrible conditions, but the
supporter pressed him, "You can do it - I know you can," he urged.
"You really believe I can do it?" asked Zumbrati.
"Yes - definitely - you can do it." the supporter gushed.
"Okay," said Zumbrati, "Get in the wheelbarrow....."
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Scott was sitting in an airplane when another guy took the seat beside
him. The new guy was an absolute wreck, pale, hands shaking, biting his
nails and moaning in fear. "Hey, pal, what's the matter?" Scott asked.
"Oh man... I've been transferred to California," the other guy answered,
"there are crazy people in California and they have shootings, gangs, race
riots, drugs, the highest crime rate..."
"Hold on," Scott interrupted, "I've lived in California all my life, and
it is not as bad as the media says. Find a nice home, go to work, mind your
own business, enroll your kids in a good school and it's as safe as anywhere
in the world."
The other passenger relaxed and stopped shaking for a moment and said,
"Oh, thank you. I've been worried to death, but if you live there and say
it's OK, I'll take your word for it. What do you do for a living?"
"Me?" said Scott, "I'm a tail gunner on a bread truck in Oakland."
May 11, 2005 message from Dennis Beresford
Bob,
You may have
already picked up on this amusing web site - but here's the link just in
case:
http://www.extreme-accounting.com/
Denny
Bob Jensen's threads on
accounting humor, especially Enron humor, are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#Humor
Happy Mother's Day
Somebody said it takes about six weeks to get back to normal after you've
had a baby ........
Somebody doesn't know that once you're a mother, "Normal," is history.
Somebody said you learn how to be a mother by instinct ...
Somebody never took a three-year-old shopping.
Somebody said being a mother is boring ! ......
Somebody never rode in a car driven by a teenager with a driver's permit.
Somebody said if you're a "good" mother, your child will "turn out good."
Somebody thinks a child comes with directions and a guarantee.
Somebody said "good" mothers never raise their voices .....
Somebody never came out the back door just in time to see her child hit a
golf ball through the neighbor's kitchen window.
Somebody said you don't need an education to be a mother.
Somebody never helped a fourth grader with her math.
Somebody said you can't love the fifth child as much as you love the
first.
Somebody doesn't have five children.
Somebody said a mother can find all the answers to her child-rearing
questions in the books .....
Somebody never had a child stuff beans up his nose or in his ears.
Somebody said the hardest part of being a mother is labor and delivery
...
Somebody never watched her "baby" get on the bus for the first day of
kindergarten...
or on a plane headed for military "boot camp."
Somebody said a mother can do her job with her eyes closed and one hand
tied behind her back ....
somebody never organized four giggling Brownies to sell cookies.
Somebody said a mother can stop worrying after her child gets married
Somebody doesn't know that marriage adds a new son or daughter-in-law to
a mother's heartstrings.
Somebody said a mother's job is done when her last child leaves home ....
Somebody never had grandchildren.
Somebody said your mother knows you love her, so you don't need to tell
her ..... Somebody isn't a mother.
And that's the way it was on May 12,
2005 with a little help from my friends.
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You
have to scroll down to the titles) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics ---
http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research Videos from Harvard University ---
http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor
(an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart
finance professor, Jim Mahar from St. Bonaventure University) ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting
newsletters are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from
TheCycles.com ---
http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com
are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information
Finder ---
http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links ---
http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best
international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to
questions in technology ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works ---
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style
Hints ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on
www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for
a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers
and education technology experts in higher education from around the
country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email:
rjensen@trinity.edu
April 30, 2005
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on April 30,
2005
Bob Jensen at
Trinity University
For
earlier editions of New Bookmarks go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words to enter ---
Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen documents have the term "Enron"
enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron. Another search engine that covers Trinity and
other universities is at
http://www.searchedu.com/.
Fraud Updates
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about
the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
For Quotations and Tidbits of the Week go to
Quotations and Tidbits
For Humor of the Week go to
Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
The Hive and the Honeybee ---
http://bees.library.cornell.edu/
Advancing Knowledge and the Knowledge Economy ---
http://advancingknowledge.com/
Advancing Knowledge and the Knowledge Economy is an
international conference that brings together leading experts to examine how
processes for creating and organizing knowledge interact with information
technology, business strategy, and changing social and economic conditions.
The conference is designed to broaden and deepen common understanding of how
difficult-to-measure knowledge resources drive an increasingly virtualized
economy and to assess prospects for advancing and regenerating knowledge
infrastructure, institutions, and policies.
Presenters will evaluate how distributed models of
innovation and learning are empowering users and challenging education,
research, and commerce. They will examine the emergence of software, the
Internet, and cyberinfrastructure as enablers of knowledge processes, and as
scaffolding for producing and using new tools and representations of
knowledge. Finally, they will consider how the management and regulation of
knowledge differs from the treatment of tangible inputs in terms of the
principles, tradeoffs, and policy models
The real world is only a special case, and not a very interesting one at
that.
--Attributed to C. E. Ferguson and forwarded by Ed Scribner
Imagination is not to be
divorced from facts: it is a way of illuminating the facts. It works by
eliciting the general principles which apply to the facts, as they exist,
and then by an intellectual survey of alternative possibilities which are
consistent with these principles. It enables men (sic) to construct an
intellectual vision of a new world, and it preserves the zest of life by the
suggestion of satisfying purposes.
Alfred North Whitehead in an address to the AACSB in 1927 and quoted in the
paper by Bennis and O'Toole cited below.
During the past several decades,
many leading B schools have quietly adopted an inappropriate --- and ultimately
self-defeating --- model of academic excellence. Instead of measuring
themselves in terms of the competence of their graduates, or by how well their
faculties understand important drivers of business performance, they measure
themselves almost solely by the rigor of their scientific research. They have
adopted a model of science that uses abstract financial and economic analysis,
statistical regressions, and laboratory psychology. Some of the research
produced is excellent, but because so little of it is grounded in actual
business practices. the focus of graduate business education has become
increasingly circumscribed --- and less and less relevant to practitioners ...We
are not advocating a return to the days when business schools were glorified
trade schools. In every business, decision making requires amassing and
analyzing objective facts, so B schools must continue to teach quantitative
skills. The challenge is to restore balance to the curriculum and the
faculty: We need rigor and relevance. The dirty little secret at
most of today's best business schools is that they chiefly serve the faculty's
research interests and career goals, with too little regard for the needs of
other stakehollders.
Warren G. Bennis and James O'Toole, "How Business Schools Lost Their
Way," Harvard Business Review, May 2005.
The article be downloaded for a fee of $6.00 ($3.70 to educators) ---
http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu/b02/en/hbr/hbr_home.jhtml
Thursday, April 28, 2005
The Chronicle of Higher Education
Business Schools' Focus on Research Has
Ensured Their Irrelevance, Says Scathing Article
By KATHERINE S. MANGAN
Business schools are
"institutionalizing their own irrelevance" by focusing on scientific
research rather than real-life business practices, according to a blistering
critique of M.B.A. programs that will be published today in the May issue of
the Harvard Business Review.
The article, "How Business Schools Lost Their Way,"
was written by Warren G. Bennis and James O'Toole, both prominent professors
at the University of Southern California's Marshall School of Business. Mr.
Bennis is also the founding chairman of the university's Leadership
Institute, and Mr. O'Toole is a research professor at Southern Cal's Center
for Effective Organizations.
Mr. Bennis and Mr. O'Toole conclude that business
schools are too focused on theory and quantitative approaches, and that, as
a result, they are graduating students who lack useful business skills and
sound ethical judgment. The authors call on business schools to become more
like medical and law schools, which treat their disciplines as professions
rather than academic departments, and to expect faculty members to be
practicing members of their professions.
"We cannot imagine a professor of surgery who has
never seen a patient or a piano teacher who doesn't play the instrument, and
yet today's business schools are packed with intelligent, highly skilled
faculty with little or no managerial experience," the two professors write.
"As a result, they can't identify the most important problems facing
executives and don't know how to analyze the indirect and long-term
implications of complex business decisions."
While business deans pay lip service to making
their courses more relevant, particularly when they are trying to raise
money, their institutions continue to promote and award tenure to faculty
members with narrow, scientific specialties, the authors contend.
"By allowing the scientific-research model to drive
out all others, business schools are institutionalizing their own
irrelevance," the authors write.
Most business problems cannot be solved neatly by
applying hypothetical models or formulas, they say. "When applied to
business -- essentially a human activity in which judgments are made with
messy, incomplete, and incoherent data -- statistical and methodological
wizardry can blind rather than illuminate."
Not surprisingly, the head of the association that
accredits business schools in the United States disagrees with the authors'
assessment. John J. Fernandes, president and chief executive officer of
AACSB International: the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business, said most business schools today are making an effort to teach
broad skills that are directly applicable to real-world business practices.
He pointed out that in 2003, the association
updated its accreditation standards to emphasize the teaching of "soft
skills" like ethics and communication, and to require that business schools
assess how well students are learning a broad range of managerial skills.
"I think the authors are looking at a very limited
group of business schools that emphasize research," said Mr. Fernandes.
"Most schools have done an excellent job of producing graduates with a broad
range of skills who can hit the ground running when they're hired."
Mr. Bennis and Mr. O'Toole are not convinced. They
say that business schools, which in the early 20th century had the
reputation of being little more than glorified trade schools, have swung too
far in the other direction by focusing too heavily on research. The shift
began in 1959, they say, when the Ford and Carnegie Foundations issued
scathing reports about the state of business-school research.
While the Southern Cal professors say they do not
favor a return to the trade-school days, they think business schools, and
business professors, have grown too comfortable with an approach that serves
their own needs but hurts students.
"This model gives scientific respectability to the
research they enjoy doing and eliminates the vocational stigma that
business-school professors once bore," the article concludes. "In short, the
model advances the careers and satisfies the egos of the professoriate."
The authors point out a few bright spots in their
otherwise gloomy assessment of M.B.A. education. The business schools at the
University of California at Berkeley and the University of Dallas are among
those that emphasize softer, nonquantifiable skills like ethics and
communication, they write. In addition, some business schools operate their
own businesses, such as the student-run investment fund offered by Cornell
University's S.C. Johnson Graduate School of Management.
Bob Jensen's threads related to this are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
The evidence
lies in lack of interest in replication
I wrote the following on December 1, 2004 at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
Faculty interest in a
professor’s “academic” research may be greater for a number of reasons.
Academic research fits into a methodology that other professors like to
hear about and critique. Since academic accounting and finance journals
are methodology driven, there is potential benefit from being inspired
to conduct a follow up study using the same or similar methods. In
contrast, practitioners are more apt to look at relevant (big) problems
for which there are no research methods accepted by the top journals.
Accounting
Research Farmers Are More Interested in Their Tractors Than in Their
Harvests
For a long time I’ve argued
that top accounting research journals are just not interested in the
relevance of their findings (except in the areas of tax and AIS). If the
journals were primarily interested in the findings themselves, they
would abandon their policies about not publishing replications of
published research findings. If accounting researchers were more
interested in relevance, they would conduct more replication studies. In
countless instances in our top accounting research journals, the
findings themselves just aren’t interesting enough to replicate. This is
something that I attacked at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book02q4.htm#Replication
At one point back in the 1980s
there was a chance for accounting programs that were becoming “Schools
of Accountancy” to become more like law schools and to have their elite
professors become more closely aligned with the legal profession. Law
schools and top law journals are less concerned about science than they
are about case methodology driven by the practice of law. But the elite
professors of accounting who already had vested interest in scientific
methodology (e.g., positivism) and analytical modeling beat down case
methodology. I once heard Bob Kaplan say to an audience that no elite
accounting research journal would publish his case research. Science
methodologies work great in the natural sciences. They are problematic
in the psychology and sociology. They are even more problematic in the
professions of accounting, law, journalism/communications, and political
“science.”
We often criticize
practitioners for ignoring academic research Maybe they are just being
smart. I chuckle when I see our heroes in the mathematical theories of
economics and finance winning prizes for knocking down theories that
were granted earlier prizes (including Nobel prices). The Beta model was
the basis for thousands of academic studies, and now the Beta model is a
fallen icon. Fama got prizes for showing that capital markets were
efficient and then more prizes for showing they were not so “efficient.”
In the meantime, investment bankers, stock traders, and mutual funds
were just ripping off investors. For a long time, elite accounting
researchers could find no “empirical evidence” of widespread earnings
management. All they had to do was look up from the computers where
their heads were buried.
Few, if any, of the elite
“academic” researchers were investigating the dire corruption of the
markets themselves that rendered many of the published empirical
findings useless.
Academic researchers worship at
the feet of Penman and do not even recognize the name of Frank Partnoy
or Jim Copeland.
My 67th birthday April 30, 2005 commentary on how research in
business schools has run full circle since the 1950s. We've now
completed the circle of virtually no science (long on speculation without rigor)
to virtually all science (strong on rigor with irrelevant findings) to
criticisms that science is not going to solve our problems that are too complex
for rigorous scientific methods.
The U.S. led the way in bringing accounting, finance, and other business
education and research into respectability in separate schools or colleges
the business (so called B-schools) within top universities of the country.
The movement began in the 1960s and followed later in Europe after leading
universities like Harvard, Chicago, Columbia, Chicago, Pennsylvania, UC
Berkeley and Stanford showed how such schools could become important sources
of cash and respectability.
A major catalyst for change was the Ford Foundation that put a large
amount of money into first the study of business schools and second the
funding of doctoral programs and students in business studies. First
came the Ford-Foundation's Gordon and Howell Report (Gordon, R.A., & Howell,
J.E. (1959). Higher education for business. New York: Columbia
University Press) that investigated the state of business higher education
in general. You can read the following at
http://siop.org/tip/backissues/tipoct97/HIGHHO~1.HTM
The Gordon and Howell report, published in
1959, examined the state of business education in the United States.
This influential report recommended that managerial and organizational
issues be studied in business schools using more rigorous scientific
methods. Applied psychologists, well equipped to undertake such an
endeavor, were highly sought after by business schools. Today, new
psychology Ph.D.s continue to land jobs in business schools. However, we
believe that this source of academic employment will be less available
in the future because psychologists in the business schools have become
well established enough to have their own "off-spring," who hold
business Ph.D.s. More business school job ads these days contain the
requirement that applicants possess degrees in business administration.
Prior to 1960, business education either took place in economics
departments of major universities or in business schools that were viewed as
parochial training programs by the more "academic" departments in humanities
and sciences where most professors held doctoral degrees. Business
schools in that era had professors rooted in practice who had no doctoral
degrees and virtually no research skills. As a result some
universities avoided having business schools altogether and others were
ashamed of the ones they had.
The Gordon and Howell Report concluded that doctoral programs were both
insufficient and inadequate for business studies. Inspired by the
Gordon and Howell Report, the Ford Foundation poured millions of dollars
into universities that would upgrade doctoral programs for business studies.
I was one of the beneficiaries of this initiative. Stanford University
obtained a great deal of this Ford Foundation money and used a goodly share
of that money to attract business doctoral students. My relatively
large fellowship to Stanford (which actually turned into a five-year
fellowship for me) afforded me the opportunity to get a PhD in accounting.
The same opportunities were taking place for other business students at
major universities around the country.
Another initiative of the Gordon and Howell Report was that doctoral
studies in business would entail very little study in business.
Instead the focus would be on building research skills. In most
instances, the business doctoral programs generally sent their students to
doctoral studies in other departments in the university. In my own
case, I can only recall having one accounting course at Stanford University.
Instead I was sent to the Mathematics, Statistics, Economics, Psychology,
and Engineering (for Operations Research) graduate studies. It was
tough, because in most instances we were thrown into courses to compete
head-to-head with doctoral students in those disciplines. I was even
sent to the Political Science Department to study (critically) the current
research of Herb Simon and his colleagues at Carnegie Mellon. That
experience taught me that traditional social science researchers were highly
skeptical of this new thrust in "business" research.
Another example of the changing times was at Ohio State University when
Tom Burns took command of doctoral students. OSU took the Stanford
approach to an extreme to where accounting doctoral students took virtually
all courses outside the College of Business. The entire thrust was one
of building research skills that could then be applied to business problems.
The nature of our academic research journals also changed. Older
journals like The Accounting Review (TAR) became more and more biased
and often printed articles that were better suited for journals in
operations research, economics, and behavioral science. Accounting
research journal relevance to the profession was spiraling down and down.
I benefited from this bias in the 1960s and 1970s because I found it
relatively easy to publish quantitative studies that assumed away the real
world and allowed us to play in easier and simpler worlds that we could
merely assume existed somewhere in the universe if not on earth. In
fairness, I think that our journal editors today demand more earthly
grounding for even our most esoteric research studies. But in the many
papers I published in the 1960s and 1970s, I can only recall one that I
think made any sort of practical contribution to the profession of
accounting (and the world never noticed that paper published in TAR).
I even got a big head and commenced to think it was mundane to even teach
accounting. In my first university I taught mostly mathematical
programming to doctoral students. When I got a chair at a second
university, I taught mathematical programming and computer programming (yes
FORTRAN and COBOL) to graduate students. But my roots were in
accounting (as a CPA), my PhD was in accounting (well sort of), and I
discovered that the real opportunities for an academic were really in
accounting. The reasons for these opportunities are rooted the various
professional attractions of top students to major in accounting and the
shortage of doctoral faculty across the world in the field of accountancy.
So I came home so to speak, but I've always been frustrated by the
difficulty of making my research relevant to the profession. If you
look at my 75+ published research papers, you will find few contributions to
the profession itself. I'm one of the guilty parties spending most
of my life conducting research of interest to me that had little relevance
to the accounting profession.
I was one of those accounting research farmers more interested in my
tractors than in my harvests. Most of my research during my entire
career devoted to a study of methods and techniques than on professional
problems faced by accounting standard setters, auditors, and business
managers. I didn't want to muck around the real world gathering data
from real businesses and real accounting firms. It was easier to live
in assumed worlds or, on occasion, to study student behavior rather than
have to go outside the campus.
What has rooted me to the real world in the past two decades is my
teaching. As contracting became exceedingly complex (e.g., derivative
financial instruments and complex financial structurings), I became
interested in finding ways of teaching about this contracting and in having
students contemplate unsolved problems of how to account for an increasingly
complex world of contracts.
In accounting research since the 1950s we've now completed the circle of
virtually no science (long on speculation without rigor) to virtually all
science (strong on rigor with irrelevant findings) to criticisms that
science is not going to solve our problems that are too complex for rigorous
scientific methods. We are also facing increasing hostility from
students and the profession that our accounting, finance, and business
faculties are really teaching in the wrong departments of our universities
--- that our faculties prefer to stay out of touch with people in the
business world and ignore the many problems faced in the real world of
business and financial reporting. For more on this I refer you to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#AcademicsVersusProfession
Things won’t change as long as our "scientists" control our editorial
boards, and they won’t give those up without a huge fight. I’m not sure that
even Accounting Horizons (AH) is aimed at practice research at the
moment. The rigor hurdles to get into AH are great as of late. Did you
compare the thicknesses of the recent AH juxtaposed against the latest
Accounting Review? Hold one in each of each in your hands.
What will make this year’s AAA plenary sessions interesting will be to
have Katherine defending our economic theorists and Denny Beresford saying
“we still don’t get it.” Katherine is now a most interesting case since, in
later life, she’s bridging the gap back to practice somewhat. Denny’s an
interesting case because he came out of practice into academe only to
discover that, like Pogo, “the enemy is us.”
I think what is misleading about the recent HBR article is that focusing
more on practice will help us solve our “big” problems. If you look at the
contributions of the HBR toward solving these problems in the last 25 years,
you will find their contributions are superficial and faddish (e.g.,
balanced score card). The real problem in accounting (and much of business
as well), is that our big problems don’t have practical solutions. I
summarize a few of those at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
Note the analogy with “your favorite greens.”
Focusing on practice will help our teaching. We can never say “never”
when it comes to research, but I pretty much stand by my claims at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#BadNews
So what can we conclude from having traveled the whole circle from
virtually no scientific method to virtually all scientific method to new
calls to back off of scientific method and grub around in the real world?
What do we conclude from facing up to the fact that research rigor and our
most pressing problems don't mix?
My recommendation at the moment is to shift the focus from scientific
rigor to cleverness and creativity in dealing with our most serious
problems. We should put less emphasis on scientific rigor applied to
trivial problems. We should put more emphasis on clever and creative
approaches to our most serious problems. For example, rather than seek
optimal ways to classify complex financial instruments into traditional debt
and equity sections on the balance sheet, perhaps we should look into clever
ways to report those instruments in non-traditional ways in this new era of
electronic communications and multimedia graphics. Much of my earlier
research was spent in applying what is called cluster analysis to
classification and aggregation. I can envision all sorts of possible
ways of extending these rudimentary efforts into our new multimedia world.
Bob Jensen on my 67th birthday on April 30, 2005
To simplify or not to simplify, that is the question (I agree with
Turner and Ketz)
Let me close by citing Harry
S. Truman who said, "I never give them hell; I just tell them the truth and they
think its hell!"
Great Speeches About the State of Accountancy
"20th Century Myths," by Lynn Turner when he was still Chief Accountant at the
SEC in 1999 ---
http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/speecharchive/1999/spch323.htm
It is
interesting to listen to people ask for simple, less complex
standards like in "the good old days." But I never hear them ask for
business to be like "the good old days," with smokestacks rather
than high technology, Glass-Steagall rather than Gramm-Leach, and
plain vanilla interest rate deals rather than swaps, collars, and
Tigers!! The bottom line is—things have changed. And so have people.
Today, we have enormous pressure on CEO’s and
CFO’s. It used to be that CEO’s would be in their positions for an
average of more than ten years. Today, the average is 3 to 4 years.
And Financial Executive Institute surveys show that the CEO and CFO
changes are often linked.
In such an environment, we in the auditing
and preparer community have created what I consider to be a
two-headed monster. The first head of this monster is what I call
the "show me" face. First, it is not uncommon to hear one say, "show
me where it says in an accounting book that I can’t do this?" This
approach to financial reporting unfortunately necessitates the level
of detail currently being developed by the Financial Accounting
Standards Board ("FASB"), the Emerging Issues Task Force, and the
AICPA’s Accounting Standards Executive Committee. Maybe this isn’t a
recent phenomenon. In 1961, Leonard Spacek, then managing partner at
Arthur Andersen, explained the motivation for less specificity in
accounting standards when he stated that "most industry
representatives and public accountants want what they call
‘flexibility’ in accounting principles. That term is never clearly
defined; but what is wanted is ‘flexibility’ that permits greater
latitude to both industry and accountants to do as they please." But
Mr. Spacek was not a defender of those who wanted to "do as they
please." He went on to say, "Public accountants are constantly
required to make a choice between obtaining or retaining a client
and standing firm for accounting principles. Where the choice
requires accepting a practice which will produce results that are
erroneous by a relatively material amount, we must decline the
engagement even though there is precedent for the practice desired
by the client."
We create the second head of our monster
when we ask for standards that absolutely do not reflect the
underlying economics of transactions. I offer two prime examples.
Leasing is first. We have accounting literature put out by the FASB
with follow-on interpretative guidance by the accounting
firms—hundreds of pages of lease accounting guidance that, I will be
the first to admit, is complex and difficult to decipher. But it is
due principally to people not being willing to call a horse a horse,
and a lease what it really is—a financing. The second example is
Statement 133 on derivatives. Some people absolutely howl about its
complexity. And yet we know that: (1) people were not complying with
the intent of the simpler Statements 52 and 80, and (2) despite the
fact that we manage risk in business by managing values rather than
notional amounts, people want to account only for notional amounts.
As a result, we ended up with a compromise position in Statement
133. To its credit, Statement 133 does advance the quality of
financial reporting. For that, I commend the FASB. But I believe
that we could have possibly achieved more, in a less complex
fashion, if people would have agreed to a standard that truly
reflects the underlying economics of the transactions in an unbiased
and representationally faithful fashion.
I certainly hope that we can find a way to
do just that with standards we develop in the future, both in the
U.S. and internationally. It will require a change in how we
approach standard setting and in how we apply those standards. It
will require a mantra based on the fact that transparent, high
quality financial reporting is what makes our capital markets the
most efficient, liquid, and deep in the world. |
To simplify or not to simplify, that is the question (I agree with
Turner and Ketz)
The Financial Accounting Standards Board is at it
again, trying to simplify the world of accounting. If only the board would
realize that you can't simplify a world growing more complex by the nanosecond.
J. Edward Ketz, "The Accounting Cycle FASB's Efforts Toward Simplification,"
SmartPros, April 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x47794.xml
Doomsday precedent: Give workers retirement plans and then pawn them
off for taxpayers to pay the pensions. Passing along these
kinds of entitlements to taxpayers is another nail in the coffin of the United
States.
"UAL Reaches Pact To Hand Over Pensions to U.S.," by Susan Carey, The Wall
Street Journal, April 25, 2005; Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111419401664114663,00.html
UAL Corp.'s United Airlines and a federal pension
insurer announced a settlement that would allow the airline to hand over its
four underfunded pension plans to the government in the largest
corporate-pension default in U.S. history.
While the move needs approval by a bankruptcy-court
judge and is certain to be contested by some of the airline's unions and
retirees, the shedding of $9.8 billion of retirement obligations would
represent a huge step in UAL's efforts to lower its costs and attract
funding to exit from Chapter 11 this fall. Giving up the plans would save
the company $645 million a year for the next five years, it has said.
Erasing that liability could force other
unprofitable airlines with heavy pension obligations to seek bankruptcy
protection specifically to foist their own underfunded plans onto the
government. According to Michael Kushner, an employee-benefits attorney for
law firm Coudert Brothers LLP, if UAL succeeds in side-stepping its pension
liabilities, that would "substantially worsen the situation for competitors
that don't have this relief." He predicted the rest of the big airlines that
offer such costly defined-benefit retirement plans "will follow suit. They
couldn't possibly survive with these legacy costs intact."
Continued in article
From The Wall Street Journal Weekly Accounting Review on April 29,
2005
TITLE: UAL Reaches Pact to Hand Over Pensions to U.S.
REPORTER: Susan Carey
DATE: Apr 25, 2005
PAGE: A2
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111419401664114663,00.html
TOPICS: Advanced Financial Accounting, Pension Accounting
SUMMARY: "UAL Corp.'s United Airlines and a federal pension insurer announced
a settlement that would allow the airline to hand over its four underfunded
pension plans to the government in the largest corporate-pension default in U.S.
history."
QUESTIONS:
1.) Distinguish between defined benefit pension plans and defined contribution
pension plans.
2.) Which type of plan is UAL terminating? What type will replace the
terminated plan?
3.) Who will be responsible for the obligations under UAL's pension plans?
4.) Why does the author state that other airlines might be more likely to
seek bankruptcy protection if UAL succeeds in winning bankruptcy-court approval
to eliminate these pension plans? Comment on the reasons the other airlines
might undertake this step both in terms of the financial impact on their current
balance sheets and their expected future income statements.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: UAL May Stop Contributions Into Pension Plans to Save Cash
REPORTER: Susan Carey
PAGE: A2
ISSUE: Jul 26, 2004
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB109088544353874512,00.html
My unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
Question
What are the pros and cons of Microsoft's new black box recorder of what you do
on your own computer?
Answer from David Fordham (who's still a bumpkin since you can't ever take
the a bumpkin out of a boy)
I figured the below-linked report might be
interesting to some:
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588-5684051.html?tag=nl.e589
Microsoft is building in a black box "flight
recorder" that expands on its current "Dr. Watson" capability, to diagnose
what went wrong when a program crashes. The new recorder has the ability to
even include application content, such as the content of the email you were
writing when the program crashed.
The new recorder will be included in the next
version of windows.
Of course, in a gesture meant to appease the
expected hue and cry from the die-hard "privacy advocates" (the epitome of a
nostalgic anachronism if there ever was one), they are letting the user
change some parameters to give a modicum of control to the computer owner as
to what is transmitted. For example, the owner will be able to strip certain
user- content information from the transmission if desired.
Other reports covering this announcements have
drawn the distinction between "computer user" and "computer owner". For
example, corporate IT departments will make the choices for their machines,
rather than letting each user make the decision as to filtering content from
the black boxes' transmissions.
Microsoft also said the corporate IT departments
have the option of also *seeing* the data sent to Microsoft from their
machines, for their own local diagnosis and support efforts. (From what I
hear, the new version of Windows will have a version aimed at, and optimized
for, corporate IT administrators who manage hundreds or thousands of
computers, -- and a different version for home users where the owner and
user are the same.
For example, most corporate users today are
defaulted to be "administrators" with almost unlimited privileges for
creating, deleting, etc on their computer. It is this "unlimited"
environment which facilitates much of the mischief originating from
unprotected machines. Dimishing the default user's privileges is one way of
hindering malware. Future corporate computers will be configured to have the
user restricted to "user", like in the good old mainframe days.
"When I moved to the city, I had to start buying
door locks, burglar bars, intruder alarms, safes, and fences. I had to start
spending my time unlocking my gates, unlocking my car, unlocking my house,
and deactivating the burglar alarm. I have to carry a key ring that's
heavier than an empty milking pail. I had no idea it was so inconvenient to
enjoy the convenience of living in a city!" -- anonymous country bumpkin
David Fordham (Former Bumpkin)
James Madison University
From the Scout Report on April 28, 2005
Correcting Course: How We Can Restore the Ideals
of Public Higher Education in a Market-Driven Era
http://www.futuresproject.org/publications/Correcting_Course.pdf
The world of higher education in the United States
continues to change dramatically, and despite the amount of press the
subject receives, many (including quite a few persons in higher education)
continue to remain oblivious to the broader scope of these transformations.
This latest 15-page report from the Futures Project (released in February
2005) provides some valuable insight into these diverse transformations.
Written by Lara Couturier and Jamie Scurry, the report points to several
symptoms of the coming crisis that will affect public higher education. They
include inadequate financial support for low-income students, rising costs
and unaffordable tuition, and elusive outcomes. This last may be one of the
most compelling aspects, as it reflects the continuing trend that "the
higher education community has not found a satisfactory way to measure,
report on, and improve performance."
(American) History Explorer ---
http://americanhistory.si.edu/explorer/index.cfm
There are many ways to explore the various facets
of history, and some of the world's leading museums have come up with a host
of online multimedia tools to bring people into this subject that is
sometimes erroneously perceived to be dry and uninteresting. The inventive
people at the National Museum of American History have recently developed
the History Explorer which allows those surfing the Web to browse through an
interactive timeline of American history. The interface is composed of items
from the Museum's various online collections, exhibitions and programs, such
as Plymouth Rock and a world map from 1511. Visitors can zoom in and out
through the timeline and its objects and also elect to toggle on or off
various themes, such as "Arts and Culture", "Peopling America", and
"Politics and Reform". Overall, this is a very well-thought-out tool for
learning about American history and one that will engage a wide range of
persons.
Bob Jensen's threads on history are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Independent Lens: A Lion's Trail
http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/lionstrail/index.html
The road to creating a popular song can take
decades and often includes a number of incarnations before the listening
public finally becomes interested. Such is the complex and at times painful
story of the song "Mbube" (which is perhaps best known in the United States
by the version titled "The Lion Sleeps Tonight"), which was first recorded
by Solomon Linda and the Evening Birds in 1939 in South Africa. This
compelling website, designed to complement an Independent Lens/PBS
documentary, provides substantive background into the stories of the people
associated with this song, and its rather nuanced history during the past
seven decades. On the site, visitors can learn about the filmmakers, the
song itself, and also provide their own feedback on the controversy
surrounding the song and the documentary itself.
Religion & Public Life: A Faith-Based Partisan
Divide
http://pewforum.org/publications/reports/religion-and-politics-report.pdf
There was a great deal of discussion during the
2004 US presidential election about the so-called "faith-based" partisan
divide. This insightful publication from the Pew Forum on Religion & Public
Life takes a closer look at this divide in its 18-pages and provides a
number of observations. The report begins by noting that Americans who
regularly attend worship services and hold traditional religious views
increasingly vote Republican, while those who are less connected to
religious institutions tend to vote Democratic. Drawing on a number of polls
and other surveys, the report also looks at other galvanizing issues such as
opposition to gay marriage and attitudes towards stem cell research. The
report also offers some interesting tables that look at how persons holding
a variety of religious beliefs feel about the role of government and
corporate welfare.
IPI Global Journalist ---
http://www.globaljournalist.org/index.html
The University of Missouri's School of Journalism
is one of the most respected journalism schools in the United States, so it
comes as no surprise to know that it sponsors the International Press
Institute's (IPI) Global Journalist magazine. The publication comes out
quarterly, and on this site visitors can read the latest edition, or browse
issues from 1999 to the present day. Each issues contains feature articles,
a calendar of events, letters to the editor, and reports from the IPI. Some
of the articles from the most recent issue include coverage of the Chinese
media, the variety of coverage in Moldovan newsrooms, and other topics. The
site also includes archived editions of the Institute's thoughtful radio
program, "Global Journalist Radio". Here, visitors can listen to mediated
discussion on topics such as nuclear proliferation, democracy in Central
Asia, and the Iraqi elections.
Part of an April 27, 2005 message from Vidya Ananthanarayanan
What Is Social Software Anyway?
Blogs: A web application which contains periodic
time-stamped posts on a common webpage. These posts are often but not
necessarily in reverse chronological order. Such a website would typically
be accessible to any Internet user.
Village Voice explores blogs in academia at
http://www.villagevoice.com/arts/0515,edsuppdayal,62903,12.html.
Explore Middlebury faculty Barbara Ganley's course blogs at
http://mt.middlebury.edu/middblogs/ganley/bgblogging/
(the course blogs are listed on the left under "My Course Blogs") or delve
into a host of course blogs at
http://educational.blogs.com/edbloggerpraxis/edu_course_blogs/index.html
Wikis: A web application that allows users to add
content, as on an Internet forum, but also allows anyone to edit the
content. Check out Wikipedia:
http://www.wikipedia.org/
RSS: "Rich Site Summary" or "Real Simple
Syndication". Web-content distribution and republication formats primarily
used by news sites and blogs. In plain English, syndicated feeds from news
sites and blogs. An easy way to stay updated on the latest and greatest in
your field of expertise.
Comment from Bob Jensen
It's easy to start your own blog. Jim Mahar's great blog was set up
at http://www.blogger.com/start
You too can set one up for free like Jim had done.
I've not yet set one up for my Tidbits, because I want to coordinate my
Tidbits with my New Bookmarks that just do not fit well into blog space.
Bob Jensen's threads on Weblogs and blogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
There are many other alternatives other than blogger.com for setting up a free
blog. See the above link for more options.
Bob Jensen's threads on Weblogs and blogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
Technology News for Dummies: What are the best sites? What are
the best brands?
Danny Briere is no dummy, he just writes for them.
Author of seven "For Dummies" books ranging from advice on turning your home
into a smart home, to putting in your own home theater, to how to hack and mod
your home wireless network, Mr. Briere is quite at home in the digital home.
That's not unexpected for the chief executive at TeleChoice, a consultancy for
the telecom and cable industries. Mr. Briere practices what he preaches in using
new technologies to make his life easier and less complex.
"Recommended Reading," The Wall Street Journal, April 18, 2005; Page
R2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111438840734015616,00.html?mod=todays_us_the_journal_report
In order to advise on the latest and greatest in
home entertainment, Mr. Briere estimates he reads more than 100
magazines, newsletters, and Webzines each week to keep current on
news and happenings. However, if he were stranded on a deserted
island with only a handful of high-tech sites to stay king of the
tech mountain, here are some sites he's certainly miss online:
• CNET,
www.cnet.com
Tried but true, CNET really sets the pace these days when it comes
to hardcore technology-only news. If it's happening in technology,
CNET is writing about it, and it usually has an angle that others
don't have. Combined with its reviews of products and tutorial
sections, it's a must-stop before you make any technology purchase."
• Engadget,
www.engadget.com
"Started by veterans from Gizmodo, Engadget offers a similar
fun-loving approach to gadgetry. Quick hit feature stories and
reviews about new technologies are their specialty. My favorite
recent story was a discussion of the pros and cons of mood-sensing
lights on your car that warn other drivers when you're cranky.
Engadget covers iPods, media extenders, wireless devices, and other
such advances too."
• eHomeUpgrade,
ehomeupgrade.com
"EHomeUpgrade covers the latest in home technologies in a way that
expands the definition of a 'fixer-upper' to include adding home
controls and robots alongside your digital media servers and home
wireless networks. EHomeUpgrade will keep you informed about the
latest moves in technifying your home. Where else can you count on a
detailed review of the Sony AIBO ERS-7M2 robotic dog?"
• SmartHome,
www.smarthome.com
"SmartHome always shows you about four or five different ways to get
the same thing done, in a do-it-yourselfer fashion that will please
the most goal-oriented parts of your psyche. Whether it's for home
automation, audio or video distribution, smarthome sensors, computer
interfaces, etc., SmartHome will give you a lot of ideas for how to
make home entertainment a whole-home activity."
• PVRBlog,
www.pvrblog.com
"PVRBlog is a blog in the limelight now with the intense focus of so
many players on the future of PVR/DVR (personal video
recorder/digital video recording) technology. With TiVo's fortunes
rising and falling, new interactive video and programming functions
being added to many new devices, and with the telcos moving so fast
into IPTV (Internet protocol television), sources like the PVRBlog
provide a daily dose of insight and analysis on what's happening in
video devices."
• Home Theater blog,
hometheaterblog.com/
"There are lots of high quality magazines covering home theater --
and most of these require print to really bring justice to their
presentation of home theater topics. But Home Theater blog gives
ongoing regular commentary, enlightened by an active reply
commentary from readers. The author is a feet-on-the-street
installer with practical insights on what the big companies are
doing to define home theater. In my book, the one who does the work
usually has the best things to say."
• Wired,
www.wired.com
"Wired magazine simply has great, detailed, and tremendously unique
technology stories to tell all the time. If nothing else, Wired
gives me great fodder for party talk. The top story this week was
about wearable computers for dogs that track the pooches' social
life...it's called 'petworking'. Wired is more than pertinent, it's
downright interesting too."
• BoingBoing,
www.boingboing.net
"Dubbing itself a 'Directory of Wonderful Things,' BoingBoing is an
uncategorizable mix of technology, gadgets, sci-fi and EFF/ACLU-leaning
politics that might not fit at all with the average businessperson,
but it is very hip and heavily read. You never know what you'll find
that you'll enjoy, but when you find it, you'll like it a lot."
|
Bob Jensen's threads about news and commentaries about computing
technologies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob4.htm#News
Top 100 tech gadgets ---
http://www.cnet.com/4520-6022_1-102337-1.html?tag=cnetfd.dl
"Be Careful What You Model." by Ross Miller, Financial Engineering News
(FEN) ---
http://www.fenews.com/fen43/capital-notions/capital-notions.html
Now that top physics journals are publishing
finance papers, it seems reasonable to borrow a trick from that august
discipline – the thought experiment. Imagine that you live in that most
idyllic of places, Black-Scholes World (BSW). The air is fresh, volatility
is both known and constant, markets never close and so on.
You have in your hand (or on your screen) an
at-the-money call option with a year until it expires. Because you are in
BSW, you know exactly what that option is worth at the present moment in
time. Consider this: What is your expected rate of return on the option
between now and the option’s expiration in one year?
An easy question, right? Think some more.
The typical profit-and-loss diagram for options,
popularly known as the “hockey-stick,” assumes that the funds invested in
options earn a zero return regardless of the time until expiration.
According to this diagram, the absolute return from an option is simply the
terminal payoff minus the current cost. The possibility that one might
require a positive return to compensate for the opportunity cost of funds
used to finance the option is either ignored for the sake of pedagogical
simplicity or relegated to a footnote.
Zero is clearly the wrong answer, so what about the
risk-free rate? That was the nearly unanimous answer to my informal,
nonscientific survey and it is what Paul Wilmott appears to be saying (if I
understand his notation) on the top of page 34 of the first volume of his
magnum opus on quantitative finance.
This answer might be defensible, but it is not what
BSW’s creators had in mind. A quick perusal of their 1973 blueprint shows
that Black-Scholes World was intended as a mere subdivision within a larger
CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model) World. Fischer Black and Myron Scholes
examine the expected rate of return for a call option in their world and use
it as the basis of an alternative approach to deriving their famous formula.
While Black and Scholes wave their hands a lot, they never present a
closed-form solution to the future value of an option over any finite period
of time, including the time left until expiration.
The strange world in which every asset earns the
risk-free rate of return for the life of the option is not Black-Scholes
World, but a universe that I will dub Cox-Ross World (CRW) after the two
economists, John Cox and Stephen Ross, who colonized this world in their
1976 Journal of Financial Economics article. (Cox and Ross explicitly refer
to their theoretical construct as a “world.”) CRW is a degenerate
neighborhood of Black-Scholes World in which risk-neutrality rules. What Cox
and Ross recommend (and what Black and Scholes allude to in an unpublished
early draft of their famous article) is that when you have a messy option it
usually pays to visit CRW to find its value.
In a risk-neutral world, yield spreads are just
wide enough to cover the capital losses from adverse credit events It is not
an exaggeration to attribute much of the revolution in derivatives and
financial engineering to the widespread adoption of Cox and Ross’s clever
trick. An unintended side effect, however, is that in the nearly thirty
years since CRW was discovered it has become greatly overpopulated with
models lacking proper papers.
Two classes of “undocumented” models now call CRW
their home. The first are models that did not meet the requirements to enter
BSW and snuck into CRW instead. Most of them are now upstanding members of
the community and everyone (save the pickiest economists) is willing to let
their illegitimacy slide.
The second class of models is more troubling. These
models, rightly or wrongly, got into CRW and never left. You see, the
standard visa for getting into CRW does not last long; in fact, it expires
the moment that it is granted. The risk-neutral paradise that CRW provides
is only valid for a single point in time. As soon as the second hand on the
clock moves, all bets are off and the model should be whisked back to a
world where people need to be compensated for at least some flavors of risk.
Those who instinctively believe that all option
investments, including the at-the-money call in my thought experiment,
should earn the risk-free rate of return are trapped in the twilight zone of
CRW. In contrast, a well-indoctrinated inhabitant of CAPM World should
believe that the expected return on the option will reflect the beta that it
inherits from its underlying security, creating a positive risk premium for
calls and a negative risk premium for puts. Unlike the beta on the
underlying, which is assumed to remain constant, this implied beta will vary
over time, so calculating the option’s expected return over any
noninfinitesimal amount of time is a daunting proposition. The living is
much easier in CRW than in the real world.
And this is where the plot twist comes in. What
happens to the financial world if enough people (and, more importantly,
their models) begin to believe that they reside in CRW? As Madge the
Palmolive lady used to say, “You’re soaking in it.” And for quite a while, I
might add.
Take the collapse in spreads on risky debt. In a
risk-neutral world, yield spreads are just wide enough to cover the expected
capital losses from adverse credit events. While unquestionably much of the
tightening over the past few years has come from good news on the credit
front, there appears to be more going on – vanishing risk premia.
And then there is the hunt for that elusive alpha
that has launched a thousand hedge funds. Because alpha is notoriously
difficult to pin down (much less capture) in CAPM World and its environs,
much of that hunt has moved to CRW. (You won’t find alpha there either, but
don’t tell anyone.)
It is natural to wonder whether all of this is just
another recipe for disaster whipped up in the financial engineers’ kitchens.
Unfounded assumptions of option replicability (portfolio insurance in 1987)
and market liquidity (LTCM in 1998) turned out to have a destabilizing
effect on financial markets.
Maybe it will be different this time around. After
all, there is nothing inherently unstable about a risk-neutral world, real
or imagined. Where the potential instability arises is when everyone wakes
up to the fantasy simultaneously. Such a sudden arousal could be triggered
by GM, Fannie Mae or any number of crises that lurk over the horizon.
It all boils down to this: Be careful what you
model, you may end up living there. What’s more, you never know when the
series might be cancelled
Question
What is algebra's "Category Theory?"
Answer
"Saunders Mac Lane, 95, Pioneer of Algebra's Category Theory, Dies," by Jeremy
Pearce, The New York Times, April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/21/education/21maclane.html
Dr. Mac Lane wrote and lectured widely about logic,
topology and other aspects of mathematics. He began the formulation of
category theory in the 1940's. In a seminal paper written in 1945 with Dr.
Samuel Eilenberg, a mathematician at Columbia, Dr. Mac Lane laid the
foundations of the theory, which provides a framework to show how
mathematical structures and families of structures relate to one another.
The theory has been used to help define
philosophical concepts, and it has applications in linguistics, mathematical
physics and computer science. It is often described as having created a
universal language for mathematicians.
Dr. J. Peter May, a professor of mathematics at
Chicago, said that Dr. Mac Lane's "prescience in category theory and many
other directions helped to change the subject of mathematics forever." In
other work, Drs. Mac Lane and Eilenberg developed a concept of topological
space that came to be known as the Eilenberg-Mac Lane space. It is used in
the study of mathematical convergence and continuity.
Continued in the article
"Is risk increasing or decreasing? IPO Vintage and the Rise of Idiosyncratic
Risk by Jason Fink, Kristin Fink, Gustavo Grullon, James Weston," Jim Mahar's
Blog, April 18, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
While well documented, increased risk (and in
particular increased firm specific risk) has been a puzzle for researchers
for quite some time. With improve transparency and deeper markets, one could
speculate that risk should be decreasing, but researchers have not been
finding this. For instance:
"recent studies by Campbell, Lettau, Malkiel,
and Xu (2001) (henceforth CLMX), Malkiel and Xu (2003), Fama and French
(2004), Wei and Zhang (2004), and Jin and Myers (2004) document that,
over the past 30 years, U.S. public firms exhibit higher firm specific
return volatility, more volatile income and earnings, lower returns on
equity, and lower survival rates. The recurring theme in all these
studies is that firm risk, however defined, has increased." But now
Fink, Fink, Grullon, and Weston may provide the explanation: firms are
going public sooner. When the age of firms is controlled for, there does
not appear to be an increase in systematic risk and in fact there may be
a decrease!
"We argue that the rise in firm specific risk can
be explained by the interaction of two reinforcing factors: a dramatic
increase in the number of new listings and a simultaneous decline in the age
of the firm at IPO."
"we find that after controlling for age and
other measures of firm maturity (e.g., book-to-market, size,
profitability, etc.), there is a negative trend in idiosyncratic risk."
Bob Jensen's threads on risk and return are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
"Six Degrees of Separation: Examining Back Door Links between Directors and
CEO Pay," Knowledge@Wharton ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/1189.cfm
The introductory paragraphs are not quoted here
Navigating through the Web of Directors
The researchers say their study also reveals the
limitations of commonplace measures of director interlocks. Standard &
Poor's ExecuComp database, for instance, focuses on reciprocal interlocks,
they say, where Directors A and B serve on each other's boards. "Such
interlocks represent only a small fraction of all linkages between
directors" and miss "substantial relations between directors that are more
than one step removed from each other," the researchers write.
"Of the 3,114 firms in our sample, only 5.7% are
reciprocally interlocked, but 24% are linked within the network. This
implies that prior research has failed to capture a large part of the
linkages within the corporate director network either due to looking at
small samples or by focusing on solely reciprocal interlocks."
The Wharton researchers brought in Seary to help
them construct and navigate through the web of directors. "My specialty is
calculating things in large social networks," Seary says. Academically, the
specialty is called "social network analysis" and it combines sociology and
human communications studies. The analysis is based on the assumption that
members of a network are interconnected or dependent on each other to
different degrees.
"When you have a large number of people like this
and a large number of corporations, the number of potential interactions
becomes very large. Because these are indirect interactions, it is not
readily obvious where they are. It's a problem of calculation and a problem
of meaning," Seary notes. "I have developed a tool box of methods for
handling very large networks."
It's a toolbox he has used to analyze even larger
networks than the corporate directors. He is working right now on building a
network of cancer patients and their families. The study is intended to
unlock evidence of the roles played by factors such as genetics, lifestyle
and diet in the onset of cancer. The network has 100,000 members so far, and
Seary believes it will go up to a million.
The conclusions of the study of CEO compensation
rest on several caveats, according to the researchers. "First, we use only
one year of data in our analysis and this restricts our ability to
generalize to other periods," they say. Also, while the back door distance
analysis suggests director relationships do influence CEO compensation, it
is "difficult to assess" whether these relationships "actually have an
important impact on CEO compensation."
The time frame of the sample gives it one
advantage, however, the researchers note: It coincides with the introduction
of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and "this means that our results should reflect
the current state of corporate governance."
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate governance are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm#Governance
That speculation is incorrect
The memo went out to University of Texas System presidents last month. The Board
of Regents had updated its rules on faculty rights and responsibilities, and
wanted to make sure that professors knew about the new code . . . Under a
section called “Freedom in the Classroom,” the policy reads: “Faculty members
are entitled to freedom in the classroom in discussing his or her subject, but
are expected not to introduce into their teaching controversial matter that has
no relation to his or her subject.” As that language spread across the Internet,
some professors suggested that there was a new crackdown in the works on what
goes on in faculty classrooms, apparently to pre-empt David Horowitz-style
“Academic Bill of Rights” legislation to regulate faculty conduct. That
speculation is incorrect.
Scott Jaschik, "Layers of Meaning," Inside Higher Ed, April
21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/21/texas
The memo went out to University of
Texas System presidents last month. The Board of Regents had
updated its rules on faculty rights and responsibilities,
and wanted to make sure that professors knew about the new
code.Much of the
language was very similar to previous versions of the rules,
including a section on faculty members’ rights to decide
what material to cover in their classrooms. But the language
— new to many scholars who had never read the old rules —
soon began circulating online.
Under a section called “Freedom
in the Classroom,” the policy reads: “Faculty members are
entitled to freedom in the classroom in discussing his or
her subject, but are expected not to introduce into their
teaching controversial matter that has no relation to his or
her subject.”
As that language spread across
the Internet, some professors suggested that there was a new
crackdown in the works on what goes on in faculty
classrooms, apparently to pre-empt David Horowitz-style
“Academic Bill of Rights” legislation to regulate faculty
conduct. That speculation is incorrect.
The Board of Regents has in fact
been in the process of revising many of its rules and
policies, and the changes in this policy were not
substantive. A policy or one like it has been in place for
decades. Michael L. Warden, a spokesman for the system, said
that the updates were routine, involved consultation with a
faculty committee, and probably would have a minimal impact.
He said he could not remember an instance in which the rules
had been cited to punish a faculty member.
Nonetheless, some faculty
leaders in Texas are upset about the rules and say that —
old or new — they are troubling. Kenneth Buckman, an
associate professor of philosophy at UT-Pan American and
vice president of the Texas Faculty Association, said it all
comes down to definitions.
“A term like ‘controversial’ is
itself a controversial term since who is going to be
defining what is controversial or not?” he said. As a
philosopher, he said, “I could probably fudge it and say
that any issue I bring up is part of what I do normally.”
But he said that the idea that
certain topics relate only to certain academic disciplines
is wrong. “It’s not like any academic discipline is in a
vacuum,” he said.
Buckman said that any professor
who uses a course “to grandstand abusively” should be
punished, but he said that there are plenty of ways for
colleges to do that, and that he doesn’t see cases where it
is necessary.
Mansour El-Kikhia, a political
scientist who is president of the Faculty Senate at UT-San
Antonio, said that many professors on his campus were
concerned about the rules. “What is the dividing line
between acceptable and not acceptable?” he asked.
El-Kikhia said that professors
were especially troubled because of national discussion of
the Academic Bill of Rights and the
dispute over Ward Churchill
at the University of Colorado. “All of these issues are
emerging and putting pressure on institutions of higher
education, especially in this era of conservatism — they
can fire you for saying inappropriate stuff.”
Not all faculty leaders share
his view. Dennis Reinhartz, head of the Faculty Senate at
the Texas campus at Arlington and a professor of Russian and
history, is on a faculty advisory committee that helped the
regents revise their rules. He said that system officials
are correct in saying that professors were involved in the
revisions and that they were not substantive.
Reinhartz said he could see
potential for problems, depending on who interprets the
policy down the road. “Right now I have a lot of faith in my
system chancellor and campus president, so I’m not worried,”
he said.
While Texas officials are
correct in pointing out that the policy has been there for
decades without upsetting faculty members, they may overstep
a bit in their defense of the rule. Warden said that the
rule is “modeled on language suggested by the American
Association of University Professors.”
A key AAUP document — the
1940 Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure
— has similar language to that used in the Texas policy. The
AAUP policy states that “teachers are entitled to freedom in
the classroom in discussing their subject, but they should
be careful not to introduce into their teaching
controversial matter which has no relation to their
subject.”
Roger Bowen, general secretary
of the AAUP, said that the AAUP language, with its phrase
“should be careful,” is a “polite suggestion” to faculty
members. But he said that the Texas policy implied that
others could make these judgments, which he said was wrong.
“The faculty member is in the
best position to make connections between material that may
not at first glance seem related, but may have a
relationship,” Bowen said, so faculty members should make
this determination. He said that Texas officials could
reassure faculty members by just adopting the AAUP language.
Continued in article
From the Scout Report on April 21, 2005
Journal of Online Behavior
http://www.behavior.net/JOB/
The Journal of Online Behavior (JOB) "is concerned
with the empirical study of human behavior in the online environment, and
with the impact of evolving communication and information technology upon
individuals, groups, organizations, and society." The peer-reviewed articles
cross science and social science disciplinary boundaries as well as
geographical boundaries. The electronic version of the journal, which is
available free of charge, includes an interactive discussion space. Some
topics addressed in the articles and research reports include comparative
media effects on communication processes and outcomes; social-cognitive
dynamics and their effects presented by online interaction; temporal and
longitudinal analyses of media influences and adaptation; and media usage
and effects by and among ethnic and cultural groups. This site is also
reviewed in the April 22, 2005 _NSDL MET Report_.
Before Victoria: Extraordinary Women of the British
Romantic Era
http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/victoria/
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
century, life for women in Britain was much different in many regards than
in the present day. Women could not join the professions, and married women
had no rights to property. By the time of Queen Victoria, women's lives had
become even more transformed, and this change produced new feminine roles
and also produced a clutch of great poets, novelists, and actresses. This
online digital exhibit, which complements an in situ installation, from the
New York Public Library contains seven brief topical essays, along with a
nice selection of images that afford additional insights. One such essay is
the one titled "Fables for the Female Sex", which addresses the explicit
moral direction handed down to women through visual culture, literature, and
conduct books during this period. For those who find this topic compelling,
the site also has a fine list of additional readings.
MedlinePlus: Mental Health
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mentalhealth.html
MedLinePlus is a joint collaboration between the
U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health
which has received strong marks during the past few years for providing
high-quality health-related materials to the Web-browsing public. This
particular area of the MedLinePlus site is devoted to providing materials
about mental health. Here visitors can learn about various related topics by
browsing through the top- level sections that include Alternative Therapy,
Coping, and Nutrition. Within each area, visitors will be directed to links
provided by a host of sources, including the Mayo Foundation, the Surgeon
General, the American Psychiatric Association, and a number of other
reputable institutions. The News section is also a fine way to keep abreast
of recent developments in the field of mental health, as it culls news
releases from some of the major international press agencies.
Two very funny fake papers
MIT's Technology Review, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1793&trk=nl
April 15, 2005 reply from Jagdish Gangolly
[JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
This sort of a prank is not limited to science. In
poetry you have amphigory.
\Am"phi*go*ry\, n. [F. amphigouri, of uncertain
derivation; perh. fr. Gr. ? + ? a circle.] A nonsense verse; a rigmarole,
with apparent meaning, which on further attention proves to be meaningless.
An example I usually give the students in my course
on Information Organisation is the following amphigory by Swinburn
(1837-1909):
_____________________________________________
From the depth of the dreary decline of the
dawn
Through a notable nimbus of nebulous moonshine,
Pallid and pink as the palm of the flag-flown
that
Flickers with fear of the flies as they float,
Are the looks of the lovers that lustrously
lean from
a marvel of mystic miraculous moonshine,
These that we feel in the blood of our blushes
that
Thicken and threaten with throbs through his
throat?
From Nephelidia by Algernon Charles Swinburn
The average starting salary of graduates with
degrees in accounting have risen 3.9 percent since the same period last year,
according to the spring salary survey from the National Association of Colleges
and Employers. Accounting graduates can expect offers averaging of $43,809.
Economics and finance graduates can expect to see offers of $42,802, which is an
increase of 5.1 percent over the previous year. This increase is in part due to
financial and treasury analysis offers averaging. $44,825. Business
administration and management graduates saw the smallest increase, 3.2 percent,
and the lowest average salary, $39,448.
"New Accounting Graduates Paid More," AccountingWeb, April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100801
Jensen Comment: The big plus for accounting graduates is that most of them
get their job offers in hand before they even graduate. The averages above
are low in terms of what larger CPA firms are paying relative to small firms and
companies not in public accounting. This does not factor in signing bonuses
which are returning for many (most?) accounting students when they sign on with
public accounting firms before getting their masters degrees. These bonuses as
well as salaries vary considerably with geographic location. I always try to
persuade my students to play down salaries relative to professional
opportunities of that first job --- quantity and quality of training, type of
client exposure, and size of office. I used to assert that smaller offices
might have better opportunities for leadership experience, but I’m told that
these days larger offices are often so swamped that new employees become leaders
at an accelerated pace. What is nice is how fast the compensation
increases for those that perform well in their early years.
Personally I wouldn't know what to do with the leisure.
Relativist income and status: The real secret to happiness
Consider this experiment where students at Harvard were
asked to choose between living in two imaginary worlds. In World One, you get
$50,000 a year while other people average $25,000. In World Two, you get
$100,000 a year, while others average $250,000. The majority of respondents
preferred the first world. They were happy to be poorer in absolute terms,
provided their RELATIVE position improved. All this suggests that a major
motivation for people in working so hard is to gain higher status directly from
their position in their organisation or from the amount of money they earn and
the homes, cars and other status symbols they are able to buy with that money.
"The real secret to happiness: higher taxes," The Age, April 14, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/statusApril15
With so many businesspeople, economists and
politicians banging away, you would have to be pretty slow not to have got
the message: what our economy desperately needs is a lowering of income tax
rates, particularly the punishing top rate of 48.5 per cent.
The high tax rates we face are discouraging people
from working as hard as they could. We need more incentive to try harder -
to earn more, produce more and consume more.
But I've just been reading a new book - by an
economics professor, no less - that argues the exact reverse: we need to
keep tax rates high to discourage us from working so hard and, in the
process, neglecting more important aspects of life, including leisure.
The prof is Richard Layard - Lord Layard, to you -
of the London School of Economics. His book is Happiness: Lessons from a New
Science, published in Britain by Allen Lane.
Why on earth could so many of us - particularly
those on the top tax rate - be working too hard and neglecting our leisure?
At base, because our evolutionary make-up makes us highly rivalrous towards
other people, to be always comparing ourselves with others and seeking
higher status.
Layard quotes other researchers' studies of vervet
monkeys. The researchers manipulated the status of a male monkey by moving
him from one group of monkeys to another. In each situation they measured
the monkey's level of serotonin, a neuro-transmitter connected with feeling
good. "The finding was striking," Layard says, "the higher the monkey's
position in the hierarchy, the better the monkey feels.
"When a monkey beats off his rivals, he not only
gets more mates and more bananas, he also gets a direct reward: being top
makes him feel great. This is a powerful motivator."
Social standing has a big effect on physical
health. When monkeys are put in different groups so that their rank changes,
their coronary arteries clog up more slowly the higher their rank.
Continued in the article
Learning by sifting through the ashes of failed dot.com business plans ---
http://businessplanarchive.org/
The Internet boom and bust of 1996 to 2002 was the
most important business phenomenon of the past several decades. In the wake
of this historic period, we have an unprecedented opportunity to learn from
our past mistakes and successes.
To help us learn from history, we are creating the
Business Plan Archive (BPA) to collect business plans and related documents
from the dot com era. These plans – the “blueprints” that lay out the
assumptions and strategies of Internet entrepreneurs – will enable
entrepreneurs and researchers to conduct both qualitative and quantitative
research.
The business plans we collect will ultimately be
stored in the Archives and Manuscript Library at the University of Maryland,
College Park. We zealously protect the privacy of all contributors and
provide them with control over how and when the documents are made
accessible.
See an example from the Archive of the kind of information the Business Plan
Archive is seeking >>
"Creating an Archive of Failed Dot-Coms: A business professor at the U.
of Maryland collects documents from technology companies that didn't make it,"
by Katherine S. Mangan, The Chronicle of Higher Education, April 15,
2005, Page A29
When future historians look back on the dot-com era, they may be surprised to
come across records of companies like Tagarama.com, which was dreamed up as a
way for passing motorists to connect with one another later by plugging
license-plate numbers into a matchmaking Web site.
The company, dreamed up by an entrepreneur in Grass Valley, Calif., has
disappeared from the Internet, but an assistant professor of management at the
University of Maryland at College Park is making sure that it--and thousands of
other little-known dot-com ventures--are not forgotten.
David A. Kirsch, an assistant professor who teaches management and
organization at Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business, has created an
online archive that chronicles the rise and fall of Internet-related start-ups
in the heady and tumultuous years from 1996 to 2002. About 60 percent of
the companies in his archive either disappeared or never got off the ground,
while the rest have survived in some form, often in scaled-down versions.
"I view myself as a biodiversity specialist going into the Amazon," says Mr.
Kirsch, when asked how he decides which dot-coms to list. "If you see the
Amazon is filled with piranhas, you don't need to collect piranhas. But if
there are only three of a rare species of bird, I try to save one of those.
It's not that I'm not interested in the thriving species, but it's the at-risk
species we need to collect now or lose forever."
The university-owned archive includes business plans and related documents
that reveal the dreams and schemes of Internet entrepreneurs
(http://businessplanarchive.org). The papers also shed light on the
assumptions that the companies' founders made about the market and their ability
to raise money, and offer hints about why some companies succeeded while others
failed.
Mr. Kirsch sees the archive, to which access if free, as a way to preserve
firsthand data about companies that have left few, if any, paper trails.
There is no time to waste, he feels.
"What if Uncle Harold dies and Aunt Mae wonders whether anyone would be
interested in the records of his dot-com company, which went bankrupt eight
years ago?" he asks. "Chances are, they were on his hard drive and
they're gone."
"People's future understanding of what happened in the dot-com era will be
richer if they have access to the companies that failed," says Mr. Kirsch.
"They'll be able to look at the entire population of firms that tried to
capitalize on the rapid commercialization of the Internet. They won't just
be sampling the success stories."
THE HUNT FOR DOCUMENTS
The archive lists basic information on about 2,400 companies, with just under
half of the entries fleshed out with business plans, executive summaries, or
other material. About 350 of those have full business plans of about 75
pages each. Most are electronically stored, although some are on paper.
Occasionally Mr. Kirsch encounters someone who is too pained or embarrassed
over a failure to appreciate having it posted for posterity. "I've had a
few people get annoyed and say, How did you get these documents?"
More often, however, he hears from people who have read about the archives,
want to share their experiences, and send him business plans and related
documents.
April 11, 2005 message from William H Wallace
[whwnbt@RIT.EDU]
For those who are interested in an Accounting group
that focuses on teaching rather than research, may I suggest that you
investigate
www.TACTYC.org
It is the website for the Teachers of Accounting at
Two-Year College (TACTYC). As the former president and an Accounting teacher
at the two-year level, I clearly have a preference for a group that focuses
on teaching and keeping faculty up to date at a reasonable cost. I invite
you to give us a look.
William H. Wallace CPA
Associate Professor
National Technical Institute for the Deaf
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 22,
2005
TITLE: REITs Can Be a Source of Tax-Friendly Income
REPORTER: Jeff D. Opdyke
DATE: Apr 19, 2005
PAGE: D2
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111387169199110207,00.html
TOPICS: Tax Shelters, Taxation, Tax Laws, Tax Planning
SUMMARY: The National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts, or NAREIT,
has analyzed income distributions from REITS in 2004 and found that 37% are
taxable at rates lower than ordinary income tax rates. Capital gains represent
over half of the distributions in 2004; most of the remainder represents
nontaxable (typically return of capital) distributions. Questions ask students
to describe the functioning of REITs, the reasons for varying tax rates
associated with REIT income streams, and use of the information in this report
for tax planning purposes.
QUESTIONS:
1.) What is a real estate investment trust (REIT)? For what purpose are these
entities organized?
2.) What are the sources of income generated by a REIT?
3.) What are the tax rates associated with each of these income streams? What
are the reasons these rates are established at such differing levels?
4.) Suppose you are a practicing CPA advising your client on the potential
future tax implications of REITs and other investment opportunities. Would you
rely on the information in this report prepared by the National Association of
Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT) regarding expected sources of income from
the investment? In your answer, particularly discuss any reasons you think the
2004 data might be unusual and describe what other sources you would consult in
making your assessment.
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
From The Wall Street Journal Accounting Weekly Review on April 22,
2005
TITLE: Lease Restatements Are Surging
REPORTER: Eiya Gullapalli
DATE: Apr 20, 2005
PAGE: C4
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111396285894611651,00.html
A long quotation from this article is available at
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Leases
TOPICS: Accounting, Advanced Financial Accounting, Lease Accounting,
Restatement, Sarbanes-Oxley Act
SUMMARY: Last winter, "the Big Four accounting firms...banded together to ask
the Security and Exchange Commission's chief accountant to clarify rules on
lease accounting...Now about 250 companies have announced restatements for lease
accounting issues..."
QUESTIONS:
1.) Why is it curious that so many companies are now restating previous
financial statements due to lease accounting problems? What does the fact that
companies must restate previous results imply about previous accounting for
these lease transactions?
2.) What industries in particular are cited for these issues in the article?
How do you think this industry uses leases?
3.) While one company, Emeritus Corp., disclosed significant impacts on
previously reported income amounts, companies are "...for the most part, not
materially affecting their earnings, analysts say..." Are you surprised by this
fact? What is the most significant impact of capitalizing a lease on a
corporation's financial statements? In your answer, define the terms operating
lease and capitalized lease.
4.) How do points made in the article show that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act is
accomplishing its intended effect?
Reviewed By: Judy Beckman, University of Rhode Island
--- RELATED ARTICLES ---
TITLE: FOOTNOTES: Recent US Earnings Restatements
REPORTER: Dow Jones Newswires
ISSUE: Apr 19, 2005
LINK:
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,BT_CO_20050419_008924,00.html
Bob Jensen's threads on lease accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Leases
April 26 message from Richard J. Campbell
[campbell@RIO.EDU]
I'm not talking about Bob Jensen here - but this is
a very interesting content aggregation program that might be of interest to
you.
http://www.browserbob.com/
Richard J. Campbell
School of Business
University of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH 45674
Questions
How do Freddie and Fannie work and how have they recently posed a threat to
market stability?
What is the root cause for incentives to cheat on accounting rules?
Answers
Bert Ely, "Cut Fannie and Freddie Down to Size," The Wall Street Journal, April
12, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111326484187604126,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Shrinking the balance sheets of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, as Alan Greenspan proposed last Wednesday, won't hurt the
availability of home mortgages or the economy. Instead, downsizing Fannie
and Freddie, the two largest government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), will
reduce the systemic risk their huge balance sheets pose to the financial
system.
Congress should, as it considers legislation to
reform GSE regulation, establish guidelines for shrinking Fannie's and
Freddie's mortgage investments, which constitute the bulk of their balance
sheets. These guidelines should limit the GSEs' investments to their
short-term liquidity needs and an inventory of mortgages awaiting
securitization. Such guidelines would also put a stop to Fannie and
Freddie's profit-seeking arbitrage behavior, which takes them well beyond
the limits of their original mandates. The GSEs take advantage of their low
borrowing costs to make derivative investments that bring no benefit to
taxpayers, mortgage-holders or mortgage-investors. The Fed has found that
this behavior only benefits Fannie's and Freddie's stockholders while
threatening the market's stability.
The capital markets finance American housing
through two channels linked to Fannie and Freddie. First, several tens of
thousands of investors, including many individuals, buy mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) that Fannie or Freddie create by bundling home mortgages
into pools and then selling pieces of those pools as MBS. By guaranteeing
the timely payment of principal and interest on those MBS, Fannie and
Freddie assume credit risk -- the possibility that some of the mortgages
collateralizing the MBS may default or go into foreclosure. Credit risk does
not pose a solvency threat to Fannie and Freddie.
However, and this is a very important however, MBS
owners assume all interest-rate risk associated with the underlying
mortgages -- variations in interest rates and the speed at which homeowners
prepay their mortgages. MBS disperse interest-rate risk across the economy
and to foreign investors. At the end of 2004, investors owned $2.25 trillion
of Fannie- and Freddie-guaranteed MBS.
The second channel is investor purchase of
unsecured debt that Fannie and Freddie issue to finance the home mortgages
and MBS they own. In addition to credit risk, Fannie and Freddie also assume
difficult-to-manage interest-rate risk on the mortgages they buy. This risk
is enormous because the two use short-term debt to finance much of their
investment in long-term, fixed-rate mortgages and MBS.
Fannie and Freddie then use various types of
derivatives to shift much of that interest-rate risk to derivatives
counterparties. At the end of last year, the notational or face amount of
Freddie's derivatives contracts was $757 billion, more than its $732 billion
of outstanding debt. Due to its accounting problems, Fannie has not
published financial statements since June 30, 2004, when it reported total
derivatives of $1 trillion, more than its borrowings of $940 billion.
Unlike the many thousands of MBS investors, Fannie
and Freddie's derivatives counterparties are the same 20 to 25 large banks
and investment firms. Hence, Fannie's and Freddie's interest-rate risk is
highly concentrated. Mr. Greenspan's concern about potential systemic risk
stems from this dangerous concentration of interest-rate risk. He said that
the Fed has "been unable to find any purpose for the huge balance sheets of
the GSEs, other than profit creation through the exploitation" of the low
borrowing costs Fannie and Freddie enjoy by virtue of being GSEs. That is,
the two GSEs are classic arbitragers, generating great profits for their
stockholders.
* * * Fortunately, Congress can easily solve this
problem by directing the GSE regulator it will create to limit Fannie's and
Freddie's investments to the amount needed for their ongoing securitization
activities. For Fannie, that number most likely falls in the $100-$150
billion range, and somewhat less for Freddie. This implies a shrinkage of
their combined outstanding debt from approximately $1.7 trillion at the end
of last year to about $250 billion.
This inferred shrinkage of $1.45 trillion is a big
number, but it can easily occur over four or five years without Fannie and
Freddie selling any mortgages or MBS financed by that debt -- there is
substantial automatic liquidation built into their mortgage investments due
to principal repayments and mortgage payoffs. Despite all the scare talk at
congressional hearings last week, GSE shrinkage will not require asset sales
which could disrupt housing finance.
Last year alone, Fannie and Freddie experienced
$422 billion of portfolio liquidations as mortgages paid down and paid off.
For the 2002-2004 period, their mortgage liquidations totaled $1.56
trillion. They compensated for those liquidations by buying newly issued
mortgages and MBS. Going forward, Fannie and Freddie can trim their size
simply by no longer buying MBS while holding the mortgages they purchase
only until they securitize them and sell the resulting MBS.
By continuing to assume credit risk at the same
rate they have been, through the issuance of new MBS, Fannie and Freddie
could maintain the same level of credit-risk support they now provide to the
housing finance market -- about $3.8 trillion. That is, as their mortgage
assets shrink, the amount of MBS they create for investors to purchase would
increase dollar-for-dollar. Because the MBS guarantee business is extremely
profitable, with after-tax returns on equity capital exceeding 25%, Fannie
and Freddie gladly provide MBS guarantees.
This substitution of MBS for the debt Fannie and
Freddie now issue would steadily reduce the systemic risk the two GSEs pose,
and the amount of interest-rate risk they must hedge with derivatives
contracts. Because MBS and GSE debt are increasingly fungible with
investors, the impact of this substitution on mortgage rates will be nil.
Once Congress enacts GSE regulatory reform, it will
try to avoid dealing with GSE issues for many years. Therefore, it is
vitally important that the reform legislation empower the new GSE regulator
to cut Fannie and Freddie down to size by limiting their mortgage
investments to what they need for liquidity and mortgage securitization, and
nothing more. Letting them continue to grow could lead to the systemic
crisis Mr. Greenspan understandably fears.
Bob Jensen's threads on the Fannie and Freddie scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
"Who’s Undermining Free Speech on Campus Now?" By David Beito, KC Johnson and
Ralph E. Luker, Inside Higher Ed, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/13/luker
Whether it is “intentional or unintentional,” for
example, Brown University bans all “verbal behavior” that may cause
“feelings of impotence, anger, or disenfranchisement.” The nation’s
Founders, who did not mind offending British authorities, would have been
ill-educated by such constrictions on free speech.
The problem with speech codes is that speech that
should be self-governed by good manners and humility is prescripted by
inflexible legal codification. Fortunately, however, the Foundation for
Individual Rights in Education has fought and won a series of legal battles
that have curtailed the prevalence of speech codes in public higher
education.
In private colleges and universities, where First
Amendment rights do not necessarily prevail, the struggle continues on an
institution by institution basis. Just when there is good news to report
about the unconstitutionality of speech codes on public campuses, however,
new threats to free speech arise from outside the academic community.
They come from the Center for the Study of Popular
Culture. The center and its legal arm, the Individual Rights Foundation, are
led by David Horowitz. A militant activist on the left in the 1960s,
Horowitz abandoned it 25 years ago to become a militant activist on the
right. Most recently, he has campaigned for enactment of an “Academic Bill
of Rights.”
Like campus speech codes, Horowitz’s Academic Bill
of Rights appears well intentioned. Insisting that academic communities must
be more responsive to outside criticism, it adopts a form of the American
Association of University Professors’ 1915 “General Report of the Committee
on Academic Freedom and Tenure.” It holds that political and religious
beliefs should not influence the hiring and tenuring of faculty or the
evaluation of students, that curricular and extra-curricular activities
should expose students to the variety of perspectives about academic matters
and public issues, and that institutions must not tolerate obstructions to
free debate nor, themselves, become vehicles of partisan advocacy.
Who could oppose such commitments? They are already
features of academe’s assumed values. Yet, the American Association of
University Professors and the American Civil Liberties Union criticize
Horowitz’s “Academic Bill of Rights” as an effort to “proscribe and
prescribe activities in classrooms and on college campuses.”
One has only to look at the legislative progress of
Horowitz’s political campaign to understand why. His bill has been
introduced in Congress by Rep. Jack Kingston, but it’s had greater promotion
in the state legislatures of California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia,
Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Ohio, Tennessee, and Washington.
Instead of being the even-handed vehicle it claims
to be, everywhere it is a function of right-wing attacks on academic
communities. In Florida, for example, Rep. Dennis Baxley says that the bill
he introduced will give students legal standing to sue professors who do not
teach “intelligent design” as an acceptable alternate to the theory of
evolution. His critics respond that it could give students who are Holocaust
deniers or who oppose birth control and modern medicine legal standing to
sue their professors. Beyond the governing authority of Florida’s public
colleges and universities and in the name of free thought and free speech,
it would encode in state law restrictions against those values.
The Founders, who recalled their own exercise of
free speech and free thought, when they challenged British governing
authority, wrote guarantees protecting them from constricting government
action. In academic communities, we need an alliance across ideological
divides to support free speech by abolishing “speech codes” and to fight the
“Academic Bill of Rights” in state legislatures and the Congress because it
is a Trojan Horse that intends the opposite of what it claims on its face.
Continued in article
PwC's Current Developments for Audit Committees in 2005 ---
http://www.pwc.com/extweb/pwcpublications.nsf/docid/5872EF7FE6D3DA8385256FA9006BD6B1
From the Scout Report on April 14, 2005
The James Madison Papers
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/madison_papers/
The mention of James Madison conjures up images of
the emergence of the U.S. Constitution, as well it should. In this
remarkable new digital collection, the American Memory Project at the
Library of Congress presents over 12,000 items in some 72,000 digital images
that offer a detailed and authoritative portrait of the man who is often
referred to as the "Father of the Constitution". This portrait effectively
emerges from the diverse set of documents offered here, which include
personal notes, drafts of letters and legislation, and autobiography, and
correspondence. The collection itself is organized into six series, and it
begins with a selection of his father's letters and continues all the way to
the postwar years of his presidency. The digital collection is further
enhanced by four nice essays, including an introductory piece by John C.A.
Stagg and a rather intriguing piece on the ciphers used by Madison in his
correspondence. The site is rounded out by a search engine and a timeline.
The Inevitable Corruption of Indicators and
Educators Through High- Stakes Testing [pdf]
http://www.asu.edu/educ/epsl/EPRU/documents/EPSL-0503-101-EPRU.pdf
The purpose of testing students has long been
debated among educational policy and educational psychology experts, and
there has been a litany of research disseminated on the subject. This latest
paper from the Education Policy Research Unit at Arizona State University
(authored by Sharon L. Nichols and David C. Berliner) explores the
problematic nature of high- stakes testing in detail throughout its
187-pages. Sponsored by a grant from the Great Lakes Center for Education
Research and Practice, the executive summary of this well-written report
begins with the assertion that "this study finds that the over-reliance on
high-stakes testing has serious negative repercussions that are present at
every level of the public school system." The report itself contains a
number of helpful chapters on its methodology, the corruption of indicators,
the incidences of student cheating, and the misrepresentation of student
data. Overall, this report is one that is well worth reading in detail,
particularly for educational policy researchers and those directly involved
in school administration and governance.
It appears SOX is here to stay, but there may be new designs almost every
year
Jonathan D. Glater, "Here It Comes: The Sarbanes-Oxley Backlash," The New
York Times, April 17, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/17/business/yourmoney/17sox.html
For corporate America, it is always a good time to
lobby - even when the public image of business is increasingly associated
with executive perp walks.
Last week, business representatives gathered in
Washington at an all-day roundtable discussion held by federal regulators
and complained about the cost of complying with a provision of the
Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform law. Not one business leader asked to repeal
the law, which was passed in 2002 after a wave of financial scandals, or to
gut it. Nearly every executive, however, lamented the costs of compliance
The criticism is striking, given that it comes
against a backdrop of continuing revelations of potential fraud, criminal
prosecution of fraud and convictions on fraud charges. Bernard J. Ebbers,
the former chief executive of WorldCom, is awaiting sentencing after being
convicted last month of fraud, conspiracy and filing false reports. Trials
of former Enron executives are set to begin this week. Arthur Andersen,
audit firm to both WorldCom and Enron, is still fighting to save its
reputation and its few remaining assets in a lawsuit brought by WorldCom
shareholders.
"There've been so many companies that have gotten
in trouble, none of them want to come out now and say we oppose" the law,
said Lynn E. Turner, a former chief accountant at the Securities and
Exchange Commission who now works at Glass, Lewis & Company, an investment
research firm in San Francisco. "It just leaves people with a bad feeling
about that company."
He added that the last person whom he had heard was
bashing Sarbanes-Oxley was Maurice R. Greenberg of the American
International Group, who resigned as chief executive last month amid a
review of the company's accounting and who invoked the Fifth Amendment when
being interviewed by investigators last week.
"I don't think you're going to see that anymore,"
Mr. Turner said of executives' campaigning against Sarbanes-Oxley.
Instead, executives are pushing for what they
describe as specific changes in the implementation of the law, while singing
its praises in general terms.
"There is no question that, broadly speaking,
Sarbanes-Oxley was necessary," said John A. Thain, chief executive of the
New York Stock Exchange, in remarks echoed by others at the roundtable.
Nick S. Cyprus, controller and chief accounting
officer for the Interpublic Group of Companies, was even more specific,
praising a provision of the law that has become a particular target for many
critics. "I'm a big advocate of 404," he said, referring to Section 404 of
the law, "and I would not make any changes at this time."
Section 404 requires companies and their auditors
to assess the companies' internal controls, which are the practices or
systems for keeping records and preventing abuse or fraud. Something as
simple as requiring two people to sign a company check, for example, is one
type of internal control.
Of the 2,500 companies that filed internal controls
reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission by the end of March,
about 8 percent, or 200, found material weaknesses, the agency's chairman,
William H. Donaldson, said at the roundtable. That exceeds the 5.6 percent
rate that Compliance Week magazine found in a review of the first 1,457
companies to report.
Executives at the roundtable consistently said that
complying with Section 404 has been more expensive than they had
anticipated, and they questioned whether the benefit - which no one has been
able to quantify - is worth the cost.
There are, perhaps unsurprisingly, several studies
of the cost of compliance from various business groups. Financial Executives
International, a networking and advocacy organization, said last month that
a survey of 217 publicly traded companies showed they had spent $4.36
million, on average, to comply with Section 404.
A different survey, of 90 clients of the Big Four
accounting firms - Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, Ernst & Young, KPMG and
PricewaterhouseCoopers - found that the companies spent an average of $7.8
million on compliance. That was about 0.10 percent of their revenue, and
less than the $9.8 million paid, on average, to C.E.O.'s at 179 companies
whose annual filings were surveyed earlier this month in Sunday Business.
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's threads on reforms are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudProposedReforms.htm
April 19, 2005 message from Philip Reckers, Mary Stone, and Don Wygal
[return@aaahq.org]
While we three participated as academic
representatives on the NASBA/AICPA joint task force to formulate the current
NASBA proposal for revising 150 hour rules, it should be understood that our
role (and that of the AICPA) was purely advisory and should not be
interpreted as support for or endorsement of the current proposal. We
believe going forward with the current draft proposal is not in the interest
of the public good or the profession. We encourage serious and timely
reflection on the forthcoming responses of both the AICPA and American
Accounting Association to the NASBA proposal; both organizations point out
major deficiencies in the NASBA proposal. While well intentioned, the
current NASBA draft proposal (whose exposure period ends June 30) is
seriously if not fatally flawed.
The exposure draft is available online at
http://www.nasba.org/nasbaweb.nsf/pub under
“NEW -- The proposed revisions to the Uniform Accountancy Rules 5-1 and 5-2
have been released for comment. Click on the appropriate text to read the
cover memo or the proposed Rules.”
Philip Reckers
Mary Stone
Don Wygal
April 20, 2005 message from Perry, Susan
[sep4v@comm.virginia.edu]
Our dean has asked us to consider dropping
Introductory Management Accounting as a pre-requisite to the business school
and a required course for all business students. Pre-business students would
be required to take Introduction to Business and Introductory Financial
Accounting. The Introduction to Financial Accounting course would then
complete the accounting requirements for all students other than Accounting
and Finance concentrators (Finance concentrators are now required to take
Intermediate I).
We are a two-year business program with students
admitted to the Commerce School in their 3rd year. Typically students take
Intermediate I and Intermediate II in this 3rd year.
Has anyone had any experience in dropping the
Introduction to Managerial Accounting course? Has anyone considered this
option and decided against it? Do you believe that one 3-hour class in
accounting is sufficient for all business majors? If you have only a 3-hour
requirement in accounting for all business majors, do you attempt to cover
both financial and managerial?
I would really appreciate your thoughts on any of
these issues.
April 20, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Susan,
I’m
probably the wrong person to ask about this since I’ve no knowledge of
programs that have done this in the past. In fact most schools that had
an Introduction to Business Course 40 years ago also had two basic
accounting courses required, although the mix between how much financial
(50/50 versus 75/25) varied between schools. Over the years the
two-course accounting requirement survived in almost every business
school whereas the Introduction to Business Course was dropped by most
programs. This course was always a problem because it was not very well
defined and varied greatly with schools and instructors. That would be
all right for elective courses, but required courses are usually more
uniform in terms of content.
There
also is a problem for students transferring into or out of your
university. Will students who have two basic accounting courses be
required to take the Introduction to Business course even if they
transfer in at the junior level? This will probably be the case for
most students transferring in at the junior level. I suspect that most
of your business students transferring out to another school will then
have to take a second basic accounting course. That would be
unfortunate as well.
Since
there are some things in our basic managerial accounting course that are
fundamental to business (e.g., budgeting, planning, control, performance
evaluation, etc.), it would seem that you are depriving your business
students of what I consider important core content.
If I were
in your position, I would probably resist this change in any way
possible.
April 21, 2005 reply from Roberts, John
[JohnRoberts@SJRCC.EDU]
Susan,
I would agree with Bob. In addition to the items he
listed as being taught and that are essential in business, Managerial
Accounting also introduces students to a host of different concepts that may
not be adequately covered in other business courses such as the importance
of understanding contribution margin, the difference between absorption and
variable costing as well as other items such as activity-based costing and
standard costs and variances.
All public universities in Florida require that
both Financial and Managerial accounting be taken before admission to their
business schools. Introduction to Business is not required by the
universities.
For our own business AS degrees we require
Financial and Managerial accounting as well as Introduction to Business.
In my opinion, eliminating Managerial Accounting
would be a disservice to the students and should be resisted if at all
possible.
John C. Roberts, Jr.
Saint Johns River Community College
283 College Drive
Orange Park, FL 32065
April 21, 2005 reply from Paul Williams
[williamsp@COMFS1.COM.NCSU.EDU]
Susan, et al:
At NC State U. we use the managerial course as the
first accounting course. Our reasoning is that it is easier for students to
understand accounting within the context in which it evolved, i.e., running
a large organization. It would seem difficult for business students to
complete a degree without some understanding of COST, budgeting, performance
evaluation, etc. Scholars have attributed the invention of double entry
accounting as one of the notable achievements of the last 2000 years because
(for good or ill) it allowed administration to become a calculative
practice. Much of accounting theory prior to the financial reporting
revolution was rationalized from a managerial perspective (for example
Edwards and Bell developed their theory of business income from the
teleology of those who manage a business with only lip service paid to
investors). I find it difficult to imagine how you make a student of
management understand accounting's role in organizations without a cost/mangerial
course. Surely it isn't now the case that substantive management decisions
are driven solely by how their effects are represented by financial
reporting rules?
If anything I would argue, "More managerial, less
financial."
"Eliot Spitzer's Case Book," by Elizabeth Weinstein, The Wall Street
Journal, April 28, 2005
Eliot Spitzer is a man on the hunt. From mutual
funds to music, executive compensation to counterfeit drugs, the New York
attorney general has pursued investigations of alleged misdeeds in half a
dozen industries.
Though sometimes criticized for focusing too
closely on Wall Street -- and on his own bid for New York state governor in
2006 -- Mr. Spitzer's probes have led to stricter controls on Wall Street
research and spurred other attorneys general to action. His landmark
investigations have zeroed in on high-profile executives, most recently
Maurice Greenberg at insurer American International Group.
Last year alone, the New York attorney general's office recovered a record
$2.38 billion earmarked for restitution to individual shareholders and other
consumers. Mr. Spitzer's office, which has an annual budget of $214 million,
has added nearly 50 lawyers to its staff of more than 500 attorneys since
1999.
Here is an overview of key investigations:
Investment Banking Stock research
Probe launched: 2001
At issue: Misleading information in analysts' public research reports
An investigation into the stock research issued by Merrill Lynch & Co.'s
Internet group, whose star analyst was Henry Blodget, showed that some
analysts harbored different opinions privately from those they expressed in
their public research reports. The investigation spawned a wide-ranging
probe over nearly two years into the procedures at many firms. Ultimately,
10 of the largest securities firms
agreed to pay $1.4 billion to settle charges that
they routinely issued misleading stock research to curry favor with
corporate clients during the stock-market bubble of the late 1990s. The
firms consented to the charges without admitting or denying wrongdoing. The
$1.4 billion settlement was among the highest ever imposed by securities
regulators, and both Mr. Blodget and Jack Grubman of Salomon Smith Barney
were banned from the securities business.
Investment Banking - IPOs
Probe launched: 2001
At issue: Unfair allocations of shares in initial public offerings
Mr. Spitzer's office also charged that several big Wall Street firms
improperly doled out coveted shares in initial public offerings to corporate
executives in a bid to win banking business. Two companies, Citigroup Inc.'s
Citigroup Global Markets unit, formerly Salomon Smith Barney, and Credit
Suisse Group's Credit Suisse First Boston, settled these charges as part of
the $1.4 billion pact with securities firms and did so without admitting or
denying wrongdoing. In a related probe, former star CSFB banker Frank
Quattrone was
convicted of obstruction of justice for impeding
and investigation of CSFB's IPO allocations.
Insurance - Improper transactions
Probe launched: 2003
At issue: Whether several AIG business deals were designed to manipulate its
financial statements
In 2003, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Mr. Spitzer's office
looked into insurance transactions that American International Group Inc.
conducted with two firms, cellphone distributor Brightpoint Inc. and PNC
Financial Services Group Inc. AIG paid $126 million in a settlement without
admitting or denying guilt. Later, both the SEC and Mr. Spitzer's office
scrutinized a deal struck between AIG and Berkshire Hathaway's General
Reinsurance unit in 2000 to determine if the deal was aimed at making the
giant insurer's reserves look healthier than they were. Longtime Chairman
Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg
retired from the company, and in late March, AIG
admitted to a broad range of improper accounting.
Other AIG executives were forced out, including chief financial officer
Howard Smith. Meanwhile, Berkshire chief Warren Buffett this week told
investigators that he
didn't know details about the contentious
transaction. Mr. Greenberg also was deposed and repeatedly invoked his
constitutional right against self incrimination.
Insurance - Broker fees
Probe launched: 2004
At issue: Whether fees paid by insurance companies to insurance brokers and
consultants posed a conflict of interest
Mr. Spitzer and other state attorneys general as well as insurance
regulators in New York and Illinois alleged that insurance companies
routinely paid fees to brokers and consultants who advised employers on
where to buy policies for workers, a potential conflict of interest. Mr.
Spitzer accused several insurance brokers of accepting undisclosed
commissions and, in the case of Marsh & McLennan, of bid-rigging --
soliciting fake bids from insurers to help steer business to favored
providers. In February 2005, Marsh
agreed to pay $850 million in restitution to
clients of its Marsh Inc. insurance brokerage firm who allegedly were
cheated by Marsh brokers. Marsh neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing.
The investigations shook up an insurance dynasty. Marsh was run by Jeffrey
W. Greenberg, the eldest son of AIG's former head Maurice Greenberg, before
he was ousted as a result of the probe. Another insurance firm included in
the probe, Ace Ltd., is run by Evan Greenberg, Jeffrey's younger brother.
Meanwhile, Aon Corp.
reached a $190 million settlement without
admitting or denying wrongdoing, and earlier this month, insurance broker
Willis Group Holdings Ltd.
said it would pay $51 million and change its
business practices to end an investigation by attorneys general in New York
and Minnesota. Willis admitted no wrongdoing or liability.
NYSE - Executive Compensation
Probe launched: 2004
At issue: Whether then-New York Stock Exchange Chairman Dick Grasso's
compensation was excessive
Mr. Spitzer sued Mr. Grasso, the NYSE and the Wall Street executive who
headed its compensation committee for what Mr. Spitzer claimed was a pay
package so huge that it violated the state law governing not-for-profit
groups. Mr. Spitzer said the compensation -- valued at nearly $200 million
-- came about as a result of Mr. Grasso's intimidation of the exchange's
board of directors. Mr. Grasso, who denied there was anything improper about
his pay, was
forced to resign from the Big Board in September
2003 following a public outcry over his compensation. The lawsuit, which is
still in progress, led to new governance oversight at the Big Board.
Retail
Probe launched: 2004
At issue: Antitrust violations by retailers
Mr. Spitzer claimed that Federated Department Stores Inc. and May Department
Stores Co. conspired to pressure housewares makers Lenox Inc., a unit of
Brown-Forman Corp. and Waterford Wedgwood PLC's U.S. unit to pull out as
planned anchors of Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.'s new tableware department. The
case was settled in August when the four companies agreed to pay a total of
$2.9 million in civil penalties but admit no wrongdoing. Later, Mr. Spitzer
charged James M. Zimmerman, Federated's retired
chairman, with perjury, alleging that he lied under oath to conceal evidence
of possible antitrust violations. Mr. Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty.
Music
Probe launched: 2004
At issue: Payments by music companies middlemen aimed at securing better
airplay for the labels' artists
Mr. Spitzer's
investigation, which is continuing, centers around independent promoters
-- middlemen between record companies and radio
stations -- whom music labels pay to help them secure better airplay for
their music releases. Broadcasters are prohibited from taking goods or cash
for playing songs on their stations. The independent-promotion system has
been viewed as a way around laws against payola -- undisclosed cash payments
to individuals in exchange for airplay. Last fall, Mr. Spitzer requested
information from Warner Music Group, EMI Group PLC, Vivendi Universal SA's
Universal Music Group, and Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG's Sony BMG Music
Entertainment. Warner Music received an additional subpoena
last week.
Marketing
Probe launched: 2004
At issue: Software secretly installed on home computers to put ads on
screens
After a six-month investigation into Internet marketer Intermix Media Inc.,
Mr. Spitzer in April 2005
filed suit, claiming the company installed a wide
range of advertising software on home computers nationwide. The software,
known as "spyware" or "adware," prompts nuisance pop-up advertising on
computer screens, setting users up for PC slowdowns and crashes. The
programs sometimes don't come with "un-install" applications and can't be
removed by most computers' add/remove function. Mr. Spitzer said the suit is
designed to combat the practice of redirecting of home computer users to
unwanted Web sites, the adding of unnecessary toolbar items and the delivery
of unwanted ads that pop up on computer screens. The civil suit accuses
Intermix of violating state General Business Law provisions against false
advertising and deceptive business practices, and also of trespass under New
York common law. Intermix has said it doesn't "promote or condone spyware"
and has ceased distribution of the software at issue, which it says was
introduced under prior leadership.
Health Care
Probe launched: 2005
At issue: Covert sales of counterfeit drugs
Mr. Spitzer's office has
sent subpoenas to three big drug wholesalers --
Cardinal Health Inc., Amerisource Bergen Corp. and McKesson Corp. -- related
to the companies' purchase of drugs on the secondary market. Although few
details about the probe have emerged, some industry analysts have said that
the subpoenas are likely connected to sales transactions involving
counterfeit products. Counterfeit drugs are those sold under a product name
without proper authorization -- they can include drugs without the active
ingredient, with an insufficient quantity of the active ingredient, with the
wrong active ingredient, or with fake packaging. The investigation focuses
on the secondary market, where the wholesalers buy drugs from each other,
often at lower prices, and counterfeit drugs are hard to track. It isn't
clear whether the wholesalers are the focus of a probe or just sources of
information.
Bob Jensen's threads on "Rotten to the Core" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
Quotations and Tidbits
Beware of email promoted patches pretending to be from
Microsoft
A malicious new piece of nastyware is spreading around
the net, pretending to be a critical Microsoft security patch. The e-mail-based
attack comes just a few days before Microsoft's scheduled patch update, and it's
sure to snag a host of unwary users. What should you look for--and beware of?
Our story details how the worm spreads, what it uses for a subject line and how
to disinfect yourself if you get caught.
Ryan Naraine, "Trojan Masquerades as Microsoft Security Update," eWeek,
April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1784676,00.asp
For legitimate information on Microsoft's eight new security
patches, go to the Washington Post on April 12 ---
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/
Cookie Monster now prefers broccoli
My beloved blue, furry monster — who sang "C is for
cookie, that's good enough for me" — is now advocating eating healthy. There's
even a new song — "A Cookie Is a Sometimes Food," where Cookie Monster learns
there are "anytime" foods and "sometimes" foods.
Chelsea J. Carter, "Cookie Monster Advocating Eating Healthy," Television AP,
April 7, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/CookiesNoNo
Business Ethics 100: The purported top 100 ethical
corporations ---
http://www.business-ethics.com/whats_new/100_best_corporate_citizens_chart_2005.pdf
It's that most beautiful time time of year in Texas
You may be on the plains or the mountains or down where
the sea breezes blow, but bluebonnets are one of the prime factors that make the
state the most beautiful land that we know.
Texas governor, senator, and western swing band leader W. Lee Pappy O’Daniel
As quoted in an always-value-added email from biology professor Bob Blystone at
Trinity University
Going After Textbook Prices
Student groups upset over high textbook prices are now going
after individual texts — organizing petition drives to urge
publishers to stop issuing new editions of expensive works if
not necessary. A
petition s
igned
by hundreds of faculty members was sent to Thomson Learning this
week, urging it to stop issuing new version of Physics for
Scientists and Engineers, a popular introductory textbook. The
professors — organized by the California Public Interest
Research Group — say that the latest version of the book,
published last year, isn’t significantly different from the
edition issued four years earlier. But a new edition not only
ends up being more expensive, but making it impossible for many
students to buy used texts.
The book in question costs $134.96. The petition says that the
faculty members are generally satisfied with the content of the
book, and object only to the high price.
They also note that an edition in Britain
sells for much less: $72.43.
Scott Jaschik, "Going After Textbook Prices,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/11/text
A liberal perspective on Wall Street in the culture and life of America
Which makes the arrival of Steve Fraser's book, an
account of how Americans have perceived Wall Street over the past 200 years,
incredibly timely. But timeliness is not its only virtue. Every Man a
Speculator: A History of Wall Street in American Life is fascinating in its
own right. Though the title suggests a focus on financial affairs, it belongs on
the shortlist of books that encompass and illuminate the entire trajectory of
the American experience. That's because Fraser knows that Wall Street is far
more than a workplace for bankers and brokers; rather, it is a place where
Americans "have wrestled with ancestral attitudes and beliefs about work and
play, about democracy and capitalism, about wealth, freedom and equality, about
God and Mammon, about heroes and villains, about luck and sexuality, about
national purpose and economic well-being."
Mike Wallace (Professor in the CUNY system), "All the World Is Green," The
Nation, March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050418&c=1&s=wallace
The Ward-Churchilling of David Corn
I've been Ward-Churchilled. In a way. This week I was
scheduled to give a speech at Arkansas State University Mountain Home, a
two-year college in the northern part of the state. But several weeks ago, Mick
Spaulding, the vice chancellor for development, contacted my speakers bureau and
canceled the contract. He said that the decision had been precipitated by
material on my personal blog at
www.davidcorn.com
. . . Several days after Spaulding killed my
gig--which was to be part of an ongoing lecture series underwritten by trout
fishing resort owners Jim and Jill Gaston--Spaulding's assistant emailed me the
offending material that had appeared on my blog. It was an ad for
anti-Bush gear
that flashes such witty lines as "Don't blame me, I voted for Kerry," "51
percent is NOT a mandate," "He's still not my president," and "Asses of Evil."
Banned in Arkansas because of a politically-pointed ad on my blog? That sounded
fishy to me. I sent Spaulding an email: Apparently, this [ad] was the only
material that affected the decision to cancel the speech. And this causes me to
be rather curious about your decision....Now why would this lead to the
cancellation of my speaking engagement? I am
well-known as a journalist who is critical of President Bush. That is why Fox
News hired me as a contributor. It is no secret
that I wrote a best-selling book called "The Lies of George W. Bush."
David Corn, "Banned in Arkansas, The Nation, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.thenation.com/capitalgames/index.mhtml?bid=3&pid=2305
The Martha Stewart defense (too little, a freckle, involved) applied to
Warren Buffett
Tomorrow morning, the Buffett catechism will come
under scrutiny in New York. The Justice Department, the Securities and Exchange
Commission and New York's attorney general, Eliot Spitzer, have asked Mr.
Buffett to meet with them in Manhattan to discuss a wide-ranging investigation
of insurance industry practices, some of which involve a Berkshire subsidiary.
Mr. Buffett is a witness in the investigation, not a target, and several people
involved in the inquiry said that there was no evidence that Mr. Buffett had
either authorized or had knowledge of any malfeasance. But the investigation has
forced Mr. Buffett, who has amassed a personal fortune that Forbes pegs at $41
billion, to respond to questions about accounting shenanigans and corporate
subterfuge, practices that he has long railed against. People close to Mr.
Buffett also say the investigation has left him fearful that his sterling
reputation - built patiently and purposefully during five decades as a
professional investor - will be sullied by events that have largely taken him by
surprise. . . . "The chance that Warren Buffett wanted to make a little extra
money out of a subsidiary that is a freckle of Berkshire's earnings is just
madness," said Mr. Munger, 81, whose law firm is representing Mr. Buffett in the
inquiry. "I've been around him all these years. He's not that stupid and he's
far too honorable."
Timothy L. O'brien, "The Oracle of Omaha's Latest Riddle," The New York
Times, April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/business/yourmoney/10omah.html?
Jensen Comment: Buffett loyalists consider any type of
corruption investigation of Warren Buffett (a multi-billionaire having very
nearly as much wealth as Bill Gates) the equivalent of investigating Mahatma
Gandhy for felonious assault. How it plays out will be most interesting. Bob
Jensen's threads on the AIG scandal are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
Remembering Okinawa: Dealing with suicide bombers — 60 years ago
Sixty years ago, the United States military invaded
Okinawa on April 1, 1945, the last bastion of the Japanese maritime empire that
stood in the way of an assault on the mainland. Operation Iceberg was perhaps
the largest combined land-sea operation since Xerxes swept into Greece,
involving more troops than at Normandy Beach — 1,600 ships, 183,000 infantry and
12,000 aircraft. More than 110,000 skilled Japanese troops, commanded by the
brilliant Gen. Ushijima and buttressed by another 100,000 coerced Okinawan
irregulars, were ready for them . . Almost every controversy of the present war
has an antecedent at Okinawa. Faulty intelligence? The War Department insisted
there were no more than 60,000 enemy troops on the island — not three times that
number who had bored into the coral with sophisticated reinforced concrete
bunkers. Suicide bombers were vastly underestimated. No one ever imagined that
there were 10,000 Japanese bombers and fighters committed to the campaign — and
perhaps as many as 4,000 kamikazes slated for suicide attacks. The result was
the greatest losses in the history of the American Navy — 36 ships sunk, 368
hit, 5,000 sailors killed. Anger arose almost immediately: Why no accurate
intelligence; why no armored aircraft carrier decks; why no suitable fighter
screens; why the need to post off the island as sitting ducks — why the need to
invade at all? Why, why, why?
Victor Davis Hanson, "Remembering Okinawa: Dealing with suicide bombers — 60
years ago ," Jewish World Review, March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0305/hanson033105.php3
Operational mistakes and intelligence gaffes are
the stuff of all wars — whether the failure to count accurately the enemy on
Sugar Loaf Hill or in the Sunni Triangle. Yet victory, then and now, goes to
those who in their calm determination press on and thus make the fewest
errors rather than none at all.
Despite heartbreak at our present losses, nothing
in the three years of this present conflict, from its first day on Sept. 11
to the present terrorism in Iraq, compares with the carnage of those few
weeks on Okinawa — for all its melancholy, still a hallowed American
victory.
Perhaps we wonder now whether a presently divided
American people can still overcome fascism, suicide bombers and beheaders to
foster freedom in an autocratic landscape. In answer, we should look back 60
years ago to what we went through in Okinawa and the subsequent humane
society and decent democracy that followed in Japan and sigh, "Yes, we can
and will again."
You can't even trust a bank's call center
Police have arrested 12 men in western India on charges
of cheating four Citibank customers out of nearly $350,000, a police officer
said Friday. Three former employees at a call center in the city of Pune and
nine of their associates have been charged with misusing financial data and
illegally withdrawing money from the accounts of the New York-based customers,
said Sanjay Jadhav, an assistant commissioner of police. "By talking pleasantly
to the customers, these men obtained the personal identification number of the
customers and used the international wire transfer system to move the funds,"
Mr. Jadhav said. Citibank, part of Citigroup, outsourced some of its customer
support operations to Mphasis BPO in Pune, 135 kilometers southeast of Bombay.
"12 Accused of Using Call Center in India to Cheat Citibank Clients," The New
York Times, April 9, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/09/business/worldbusiness/09outsource.html
Do you suppose our lawmakers on the take from the banking
industry could've left the loophole on purpose?
For the last few years, student loan companies have
taken great advantage of subsidies that Congress thought it had done away with
more than a decade ago. Through creative use of a loophole in federal law,
lenders have amassed huge portfolios of loans carrying 9.5 percent interest
rates, guaranteed by the government, at a time when students are paying a little
more than a third of that.
Greg Winter, "Closed Loophole Hasn't Cut Subsidies for Student Loans," The
New York Times, April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/politics/10xcollege.html
Norway's female quota laws for company boardrooms
Norway will shut companies that refuse to recruit
at least 40% women to their boards by 2007, a cabinet minister has said.
Promising stern action against recalcitrant firms, Children and Family Affairs
Minister Laila Daavoey on Tuesday regretted the companies were not doing enough
to bring about gender equality at the workplace. "Companies have been dragging
their feet. They really have to recruit more women," Daavoey said. "In the very
worst case, they will face closure."
"Norway seeks gender equality," Aljazeera, April 6, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/6B45A478-01ED-4C63-A693-EC0EDF36B900.htm
Career, not children
Maxine McKew's decision to pursue a career in
journalism rather than have children has appeared in a new book by bestselling
motivational author Jack Welch. Winning, released this month, quotes the ABC
host McKew in a chapter about work-life balance and the sacrifices made by
high-achieving women. Welch, the former chief executive and chairman of General
Electric, writes he expected to "to be slammed" by McKew when, at a 2003 forum
in Australia, he suggested women who paused on the corporate ladder to have
children were not making a sacrifice. Instead, McKew made a series of revealing
remarks about her own experience. "Women do give up something. It's biology,"
the book quotes her as saying. "Let me tell you what I gave up. I wanted my
career. And so I never had children." Welch's first book, Jack: Straight From
The Gut, became an international bestseller, selling 2.7 million copies. McKew,
51, yesterday said she stood by the comments and had seen a preview copy of the
book. But she said she was talking only about herself and other women had been
able to balance children and a stellar career.
Daniel Dasey, "Career, not children: McKew," Sydney Morning Herald, April
10, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/09/1112997221676.html
Jensen Comment: I'm not a Jack Welch fan and hate to plug his
books. But you can find some reviews of Winning at
http://snipurl.com/WinningApril10
Future dominated by old people
If Australia's birth rate keeps declining, even massive
immigration cannot save us from a population slide and a future dominated by old
people. Paola Totaro reports. They are sisters, close in age and glued
emotionally, even though the three live in different Australian cities. They are
in their late 30s or early 40s, university graduates with demanding jobs. Only
one has children. Together, the three women encapsulate an unfolding demographic
story, one which experts believe is poised to change forever the nature of
Australian society.
"Where have all the babies gone?" Sydney Morning Herald, April 9, 2005
---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/08/1112815726341.html
Significantly, polling nationwide continues to show
that Australians who want children still aspire to having two or more. But
fewer people believe children are necessary to a fulfilling life. The
Australian survey of social attitudes, for example, found that of more than
4000 people surveyed, 33.9 per cent of women and 45 per cent of men felt
that life would be incomplete without children.
The phenomenon is not unique to Australia, and all
the countries that have passed through the social and sexual revolution are
registering falling birth rates. Today, the rate in more than 60 nations,
including Australia, has fallen to 1.75 children per woman, below what is
known as the "replacement rate" of 2.1. The birth rate in women of
child-bearing age is such that they simply won't replace the same number of
people in the next generation.
In Australia, birth rates have halved since 1961.
Europe's average is 1.4, Japan is a little lower, while many countries, such
as Italy, Spain and Greece, register rates of 1.2 or even less. In Germany,
fertility rates had dropped below replacement level by the late 1960s and
its population of children has been dwindling for a generation.
If Bureau of Statistics projections are right,
Australia's child population will shrink dramatically over the next 45 years, as
women delay child-bearing, have fewer babies, and the population ages. "When you
walk down the street in 2050, it will be rare to see children. You'll be seeing
older people," Ann Harding, director of the National Centre for Social and
Economic Modelling, says. "Our whole society is going to have to change the way
it does things to meet the needs of older people."
"A nation of empty playgrounds," Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/10/1113071854508.html
Drivers showed they would not feel any guilt in injuring or running over a
pedestrian
About 40 per cent of the 640 taxi and bus drivers
surveyed by San Marcos University in Lima suffered from psychological problems
and showed psychopathic tendencies, such as aggressive, anxious and antisocial
behaviour, the study, published this week, said. "Drivers showed they would not
feel any guilt in injuring or running over a pedestrian," the study added.
Hundreds of people die each year in bus and taxi crashes in Peru because of bad
roads, poorly maintained vehicles and recklessness by drivers. In the last three
months of last year at least 85 people were killed in crashes.
"Your life in their hands," Sydney Morning Herald, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/09/1112997229357.html
New student grievance procedures at Columbia University
Columbia University on Monday announced new grievance
procedures for students who feel that they have been unfairly treated in their
courses. The new procedures follow an investigation into allegations that Middle
Eastern studies professors intimidated students who were pro-Israel. A faculty
committee rejected most of those charges, but said that inadequate grievance
procedures created distrust between students and professors.
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, April 12, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/12/qt
Vermont's proposed version of
its own tax-paid health insurance plan
This has got to be crazy from a state that already has towns trying to secede
and residents moving to New Hampshire to avoid a high income and sales taxes
A House committee comprised largely of Democrats on
Friday adopted a health-care reform plan that restructures key parts of state
government to lay the groundwork for a publicly financed, universal-care system
paid for with taxes. The plan calls for primary and preventative care coverage
for all Vermonters by July 2007, publicly funded hospital coverage by October
2007, and universal coverage for other medical needs no later than July 2009.
The proposal was immediately criticized by physicians, hospital officials and
insurance executives because the proposal calls for sweeping changes to
Vermont's health-care delivery system without saying how much it would cost or
what medical procedures would be covered. Those decisions were put off until
next year to allow lawmakers more time to meet with business leaders,
health-care officials and Vermont residents to understand better what coverage
level they desire and how much they are willing to pay. "This is a big two
step," said Rep. John Tracy, D-Burlington and chairman of the House Health Care
Committee. "This summer and fall is the time for people to have that
discussion." Governor James Douglas, a Republican, did not wait to blast the
proposal. "When Vermonters take a good hard look at what the House Democrats are
proposing they're going to want a second opinion," said Douglas, who believes
the plan will increase income taxes 134 percent and lead to health-care
rationing. "This plan would dramatically raise taxes and put health care
decisions in the hands of politicians and government bureaucrats," said Douglas,
"a prospect I fundamentally and unequivocally oppose." Asked if he would veto
the bill if it reached his desk unchanged, Douglas dodged the question but said:
"I think I am sending a pretty clear message."
John Ziconni, "Committee passes single-payer universal health insurance plan,"
Times Argus, April 9, 2005 ---
http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050409/NEWS/504090371/1002/NEWS01
How safe are unlisted phone numbers? New threats to folks
who pay to unlist their phone numbers
In the past five years, what most of us only recently
thought of as ''nobody's business'' has become the big business of everybody's
business. Perhaps you are one of the 30 million Americans who pay for what you
think is an unlisted telephone number to protect your privacy. But when you
order an item using an 800 number, your own number may become fair game for any
retailer who subscribes to one of the booming corporate data-collection
services. In turn, those services may be -- and some have been -- penetrated by
identity thieves. In the past five years,
what most of us only recently thought of as ''nobody's business'' has become the
big business of everybody's business. Perhaps you are one of the 30 million
Americans who pay for what you think is an unlisted telephone number to protect
your privacy. But when you order an item using an 800 number, your own number
may become fair game for any retailer who subscribes to one of the booming
corporate data-collection services. In turn, those services may be -- and some
have been -- penetrated by identity thieves. The computer's ability to collect
an infinity of data about individuals -- tracking every movement and purchase,
assembling facts and traits in a personal dossier, forgetting nothing -- was in
place before 9/11. But among the unremarked casualties of that day was a value
that Americans once treasured: personal privacy. William Sapphire,
"Goodbye to Privacy," The New York Times, April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/books/review/10COVERSAFIRE.html
April 9, 2005 reply from a Trinity University faculty member:
Case in point. Maybe 15 or 20 years ago I received
a call from Trinity Security. XXXXX's husband had died and they could not
reach her to tell her about it because she had an unlisted number. I knew
YYYYY had XXXXX's number but we could not call him because he had an
unlisted number. I don't remember how that worked out but it was very
frustrating,
We have several faculty who over the years had
minor children. I just shutter what would happen if one of the children was
seriously hurt and unconscious but they could not be notified because they
have unlisted phone numbers.
Jensen Comment
An alternative to unlisted phone service is something like what SBC now offers
in selected cities in most states (but not most towns at this point in time).
The link for Texas is at
http://www01.sbc.com/Products_Services/Residential/ProdInfo_1/1,,97--6-3-0,00.html
Privacy Manager® is a service
that screens your calls so you know
who it is before you pick up.
Pricing
(keep in mind that there is also a
monthly fee for unlisting your phone
number)
$5.99 per month for Privacy Manager®
$5.00 one time installation fee
What will it
do for me? (According to SBC)
-
Protect your privacy — A
recording will notify the caller
that you do not accept
unidentified, anonymous, or out
of area calls. A series of
choices will guide the caller to
self-identify. You then have
four options for handling the
call: send to
voice mail,
accept, decline or place on a do
not call list if the caller is a
telemarketer. To hear a
demonstration of the service
call 1-888-560-9299.
-
Save time — If a phone
solicitor calls, one of the
options you have is to be placed
on a telemarketer's do not call
list. This prevents you from
having to make time to provide a
written request or call to have
this done.
-
Have peace of mind — Our
service requires that callers
self identify or the phone
doesn't even ring. This keeps
you from dealing with annoying
or unwanted calls.
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I had many interesting replies to this module when it was sent
out as an email message. These informative replies were posted in the April 12
edition of New Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book05q2.htm#041205
Bob Jensen's threads on security issues are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm
US News rankings of the top business schools ---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/grad/rankings/mba/brief/mbarank_brief.php
From a Law Review Article: Would you like to murder somebody and get away
with it?
You may have daydreamed about it: some forgotten
constitutional provision, combined with an obscure statute, that together make
it possible for people in the know to commit crimes with impunity. Whether you
were looking for opportunities to commit crimes or afraid that somebody else
was, the possibility of a constitutional “perfect crime” was too compelling to
ignore. This Essay represents the fruits of my own daydreams, combined with the
fact that lately I have spent my lucid moments mulling over one particular
forgotten constitutional provision: the Sixth Amendment’s vicinage requirement.
This article argues that there is a 50-square-mile swath of Idaho in which one
can commit felonies with impunity. This is because of the intersection of a
poorly drafted statute with a clear but neglected constitutional provision: the
Sixth Amendment's Vicinage Clause. Although lesser criminal charges and civil
liability still loom, the remaining possibility of criminals going free over a
needless technical failure by Congress is difficult to stomach. No criminal
defendant has ever broached the subject, let alone faced the numerous (though
unconvincing) counterarguments. This shows that vicinage is not taken seriously
by lawyers or judges. Still, Congress should close the Idaho loophole, not
pretend it does not exist.
"The Perfect Crime ," by BRIAN C. KALT, Michigan State University
College of Law ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=691642
If that fails, take you intended victim for a
Holiday in Sweden
I doubt that Swedish sentences are much a deterrent for murder: How early will
he be paroled?
An 18 year old
who murdered the owner of a restaurant in Malmö last autumn has been sentenced
to eight years in prison. His accomplice, who was also eighteen, will serve five
years for serious assault. On October 3rd 2004 the owners of the restaurant
Wendis in Malmö were closing for the night. Mohamed Saeed Omar and Boonrawd
Paernkit had hidden in the toilet and, armed with knives, pepper spray and with
covered faces, planned to rob the restaurant. The female restaurant owner was
stabbed to death and her husband, Wendi Ma, was stabbed in his eyes. Mohamed
Saeed Omar was found guilty by Malmö district court of the murder and robbery of
the female restaurant owner. He was also convicted for the serious assault of
her husband. His friend, Boonrawd Paernkit, was convicted to five years in
prison for seriously assaulting Wendi Ma, but found not guilty of murder. Three
other friends of the 18 year olds were convicted of attempted robbery and will
be put into social care. They were standing outside the restaurant keeping watch
during the crime.
"Eight years for killing female restaurant owner," The Local, March 15,
2005 ---
http://www.thelocal.se/article.php?ID=1107&date=20050315
This is certain to raise the blood pressure of creationists
Scientists who three years ago discovered a nearly
complete 7 million-year-old skull in central Africa have dug up additional
evidence supporting the conclusion that the skull belonged to the earliest known
human ancestor. The new findings -- two jaw bones and an upper premolar tooth --
lend credence to the proposition that the creature was probably among the first
hominid, or human-like, primates to live after humans and chimpanzees diverged
from each other a little more than 7 million years ago.
Rick Weiss, "More Evidence of Skull's Link to Humans Remains Believed To Be From
Earliest Known Ancestor," Washington Post, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A32376-2005Apr6.html
Something needs to be changed: When a physician writes a legal
prescription why should the pharmacy be allowed to override the physician or put
unnecessary hurdles in the way. Perhaps it will take some lawsuits to set
pharmacists straight on this one.
Something is off when access to contraception depends
on who is working the late shift at Walgreen's. The real scandal is not that
women are being denied birth control, but that they have to ask for it. There is
no reason why a woman's access to contraception should depend on a single Roman
Catholic with a conscience, or why a pharmacist should have to weigh the
decision between denying a woman her prescription and violating deeply held
moral beliefs.
Kerry Howley, "Immaculate Contraception Medicine and theology face off in the
pharmacy," ReasonOnLine, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/links/links040705.shtml
Factors that account for the success or failure of countries to develop
"One-fifth of the planet lives on less than $1 a day,
so if we can unlock the mystery of why that is, the consequences for the welfare
of billions of people will be huge," says Wacziarg, associate professor of
economics at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. A country's economic
institutions, laws, demographics, and policies have a great deal to do with its
level of prosperity, concludes Wacziarg, a member of the School's
multidisciplinary political economy group who has researched the factors that
account for the success or failure of countries to develop. Wacziarg's work
first takes into account the more obvious factors that affect economic
growth—what he calls the "proximate" causes: the accumulation of means of
production and human capital, the development and adoption of technology, and
the rate of depreciation of capital. Much like corporations, without adequate
technology and capital accumulation, countries cannot grow. Where the mystery
lies, however, is in the factors that cause accumulation and the adoption of
technology. These are the deeper causes of growth, the factors that affect the
proximate causes themselves. "That's where it gets interesting," he says. These
deeper causes are the structural features of an economy that shape the
incentives to which firms and households are subjected—its demographics, its
institutions, its geographic characteristics, and its governmental policies.
Marguerite Rigoglioso, "Unlocking the Mystery of Poverty," Stanford GSB Alumni
News, April 2005 ---
http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/research/econ_wacziarg_poverty.shtml
Perhaps the only way a nation can
have a bordered Internet is to ban the
Internet
The Internet, as we've heard time after
time, is borderless. That means that
some of the material people publish
online will be legal in some places and
illegal in others. America faces this
problem every day when offshore gambling
operations run Web sites that are
available to anyone here, even though
they're illegal. Laws also vary from
state to state: You can order wine from
an out-of-state winery
in some states,
but not others.
Not to continue picking on Paris --
after all, Random Access bought an "aller
retour"
ticket to France this week -- but
insisting that French law apply to a
distant corner of the Internet, just
because you can access it from inside
French borders, raises tough questions
about online freedom. Consider Yahoo
Inc.'s continuing troubles with naughty
Nazis auctioning their paraphernalia
online. The latest twist in this ongoing
tale is in Yahoo's favor. A French
appeals court yesterday cleared the
company's former president and chief
executive, Tim Koogle, of charges that
he violated French law by allowing Nazi
and racist items to be sold through its
U.S. auction site.
Robert MacMillan,
"Can
the Internet Have Borders?
The
Washington Post, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33680-2005Apr7.html?referrer=email
An American Hero
Sergeant Smith died two years ago
in a battle with Iraqi Republican Guards near what was then
called Saddam Hussein International Airport. According to
his Medal of Honor citation, Sergeant Smith single-handedly
saved more than 100 American lives and killed as many as 50
Iraqi soldiers. He did so "in total disregard for his own
life." President Bush presented the Medal to Sergeant
Smith's family on Monday at the White House, and yesterday
the fallen soldier was inducted into the Hall of Heroes, the
ceremonial room at the Pentagon that honors Medal of Honor
winners. The Medal is so rarely awarded that the last
recipients fought in Somalia in 1993. Harry Truman once said
he would rather win a Medal of Honor than be President.
"Sergeant First Class Paul Smith," The Wall Street
Journal, April 6, 2005; Page A10 --
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111274784521899061,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Jensen Comment: There are relatively few recipients of the
Medal of Honor. Statistics are given at
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/mohstats.htm
K-12 Teaching Resources ---
http://www.topteachingresources.com/
eBay does have a fraud investigation team
Between about April 2003 and about
January 2004, Stergios tried to fraudulently buy and sell
merchandise, including jewelry, watches and computers, over
the Internet through online auction Web site eBay. Stergios
engaged in the fraudulent transactions with at least 321
victims, Frank said. Stergios tried to trick his victims out
of around $420,000, but the actual loss was closer to
$120,000 because some of the transactions weren't completed.
In these transactions, Stergios would obtain either valuable
merchandise for which he did not pay full value, or he would
accept personal checks, bank checks, money orders, wire
transfer payments and PayPal payments for merchandise that
he did not deliver, and he would not provide refunds, Frank
said. In addition, Frank said Stergios would bid on items
such as jewelry, watches and computers, accept delivery of
the merchandise and then pay with a check from a nonexistent
account at Border Trust in South China, Maine. Border Trust
received about 176 fraudulent bank checks for a total of
more than $200,000, written on behalf of Stergios, Evolve
Ent. Inc., Utopia Gifts, Draco Products and Thomas Brooks.
Those persons or entities did not have accounts with Border
Trust and the checks were not legitimate, Frank said. While
not going into detail, an eBay spokesman said the company's
fraud investigation team worked with Maine authorities and
provided them with information they needed to apprehend
Stergios.
Linda Rosencrance , "Maine man sentenced to 6 years for eBay
," Computer World, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/security/cybercrime/story/0,10801,100923,00.html
If you're running out of challenges for
your computer, try this for fun
Alerted to a counterfeiting ring,
police rushed to the scene and collared the prime suspect. A
12-year-old boy from West Seattle. The Madison Middle School
student used a relative's computer to create 20
realistic-looking $1 bills earlier this week and passed a
dozen of them out to classmates, according to Seattle Public
Schools spokesman Peter Daniels. One of the boy's friends
used a phony dollar to make a purchase in the school
cafeteria Monday, but the con wasn't discovered until
cashiers made their tallies at the end of the day, Daniels
said.
Jessica Blanchard, "12-year-old nabbed for printing $1
bills," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 8, 2005 ---
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/219333_counterfeit08.html
Back to the days of Enron
From Jim Mahar's blog on April 7, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Mark Chen
SSRN-Do Analyst Conflicts Matter?
Evidence from Stock Recommendations
by Anup Agrawal, Mark Chen
Agrawal and
Chen have a really cool paper that
looks at conflicts of interest with
investment bankers and their
affiliated brokerages. They find
sure enough that the conflicts of
interest do influence
recommendations. However, the
authors also make a pretty
convincing case that these conflicts
and biased recommendations probably
are known by investors and therefore
the market place is not tricked.
I'll try to find some time to write
more about this paper soon. It is
definitely worth reading!
Suggested Citation
Agrawal, Anup and Chen, Mark, "Do
Analyst Conflicts Matter? Evidence
from Stock Recommendations" (March
2005).
http://ssrn.com/abstract=654281
Bob Jensen't threads on security analyst
frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Varsity athletics versus the Greeks
Brown University’s wrestling coach acted
inappropriately when he told members of his
team they had to choose between being on his
squad and joining a fraternity, university
officials say. Brown administrators declined
to say what action, if any, they had taken
against Coach David Amato, and some of the
coach’s critics complained that he’d gotten
a wrist slap, not a real punishment.Alumni
and students affiliated with the Delta Tau
fraternity were
furious
last month when at
least two freshman wrestlers who had been
planning on joining Greek organizations
decided not to, citing what they
characterized as an ultimatum from Amato.
Doug Lederman, "A Coach Goes Too
Far,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 11,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/11/wrestle
The geese are hissing in Europe
JEAN-BAPTISTE COLBERT, Louis XIV’s
treasurer, advised that “the art of taxation consists in so
plucking the goose as to obtain the largest possible amount
of feathers with the smallest possible amount of hissing.”
The sound of hissing coming from Marks & Spencer (M&S) may
soon resonate all over the European Union (EU). In February,
the British retailer appeared before the European Court of
Justice in Luxembourg in an attempt to overturn a ruling by
Britain’s Inland Revenue that the firm could not offset past
losses at its French, German and Belgian subsidiaries
against its British tax bill. The ruling, said M&S, unfairly
penalises overseas investment. On Thursday April 7th, Miguel
Poiares Maduro, an advocate-general at the European Court
whose opinion the court generally follows, agreed with the
company, saying that banning consolidation of taxes across
the EU was incompatible with Union law.
"Taxing times," The Economist, April 8, 2--5 ---
http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3856669
Make her pronounce what
you want her to pronounce in 64 languages ---
http://vhost.oddcast.com/vhost_minisite/
You can choose wide variations in male or female voices,
clothes, hair style, language etc.
I even got her to talk Texan at
http://www.oddcast.com/sitepal/ (Click on Try It Now)
She did all right on "Ya'll" and "Fix'in" but she
mispronounced "Luchenbach."
(Link forwarded by David Coy)
Jensen Comment: Any
mispronunciations of proper names. may be our own fault.
For example, when I lived in Maine I learned that Mainers
pronounce Mt Desert Island like it was French pastry and
Calais, Maine like it was a a piece of dry and thorny skin
under your big toe.
Today is the April 15
deadline.
Taxpayers filed nearly 56 million
returns electronically as of April 8, an 8 percent increase
over 2004 figures. That translates to nearly two-thirds of
all tax returns, the IRS said. Not only that, Uncle Sam's
bean counters expect that this year will mark the first time
that more than half of individual tax returns will be filed
online. A lot of that is due to the
Free File
software, which the IRS said accepted more than 4 million
tax returns as of April 6, an almost 45 percent increase
over the number filed last year.
Robert MacMillan, "E-Filing Clicks With Taxpayers,"
Washington Post, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A52797-2005Apr14.html?referrer=email
Jensen Comment: Free tax filing software is now available
at
http://www.irs.gov/efile/article/0,,id=118986,00.html
The IRS warns against filing electronically very late in the
day on April 15. The lines could be jammed and you may not
get through.
Pope fraud
In the greedy world of spam e-mail and
electronic fraud, nothing is sacred - not even the death of
Pope John Paul II. Spammers are using the pope's passing to
entice the Roman Catholic faithful worldwide into a bogus
moneymaking scheme by luring them with an offer of free
books about the pontiff, a British-based computer security
expert warned Tuesday. The spam campaign was detected Friday
- the day John Paul was laid to rest after a funeral that
drew dozens of world leaders and hundreds of thousands of
pilgrims - said Graham Cluley, a senior technology
consultant with London's SophosLabs PLC.
"Spammers Using Pope's Image to Defraud," iWon News,
April 12, 2005 ---
http://apnews1.iwon.com/article/20050412/D89E07K80.html
Two very funny fake
papers
MIT's Technology Review, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/blog.asp?blogID=1793&trk=nl
This one is, well, . . .
a fake
A "scientific paper" was authored by a computer and accepted
by one of those "fakey" conferences
SCIgen is a program that generates
random Computer Science research papers, including graphs,
figures, and citations. It uses a hand-written context-free
grammar to form all elements of the papers. Our aim here is
to maximize amusement, rather than coherence. One useful
purpose for such a program is to auto-generate submissions
to "fake" conferences; that is, conferences with no quality
standards, which exist only to make money. A prime example,
which you may recognize from spam in your inbox, is SCI/IIIS
and its dozens of co-located conferences (for example, check
out the gibberish on the WMSCI 2005 website). Using SCIgen
to generate submissions for conferences like this gives us
pleasure to no end. In fact, one of our papers was accepted
to SCI 2005!
Nick Danger, "Randomly-Generated Scientific Paper Accepted
by Conference MIT Computer Science Department ," Free
Republic,
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1383008/posts
Jensen Comment" "Fake conferences" are often used to enrich
conference organizers at the expense of colleges who fund
travel expenses for professors.
This site is full of facts
on about the decline in teen pregnancies ---
http://www.teenpregnancy.org/whycare/whatif.asp
April 11, 2005 message from
William H Wallace
[whwnbt@RIT.EDU]
For those who are interested in an Accounting group that
focuses on teaching rather than research, may I suggest
that you investigate
www.TACTYC.org
It is
the website for the Teachers of Accounting at Two-Year
College (TACTYC). As the former president and an
Accounting teacher at the two-year level, I clearly have
a preference for a group that focuses on teaching and
keeping faculty up to date at a reasonable cost. I
invite you to give us a look.
William
H. Wallace CPA
Associate Professor
National Technical Institute for the Deaf
Creationists aren't going
to like this one
"LEGACY FOR THE
HUMAN SPECIES." Now everybody else has a chance to
trace their roots -- and perhaps get a surprise like
D'Onofrio's. Using a kit that can be purchased for $99.95,
plus shipping and handling,
online, you collect a sample of
cells scraped from the inside of your mouth and send it in.
You may then view the results of the analysis later on the
Web site. As more people send in their specimens, an
ever-richer picture of our collective past will come to
light. Those who check back regularly over the years will
get an increasingly detailed map of their genetic roots.
The project emerged out of Wells' work as a real-life
Indiana Jones. The anthropologist and geneticist does plenty
of research in remote locations. Even when he's back home,
he dresses as if he's about to go trekking -- in flannel
shirts, jeans, and field boots. He has spent much of the
past decade tracing our common lineage back to an "Eve" who
lived in Africa 80,000 years ago, and an "Adam" who lived
there 20,000 years later. He published the story two years
ago in the book Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey, which was
also made into a documentary movie.
Steve Hamm, "Tracing Humanity's Genetic Roots: The
Genographic Project, a National Geographic Society-IBM
alliance, is the first to map our ancestors' migration,
using cells the public submits," Business Week, April
13, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/apr2005/nf20050413_6564_db016.htm
Full-body condom
sometimes is not sufficient protection
On March 1, colleagues of French
financier Edouard Stern found their boss lying dead in a
pool of blood in the bedroom of his Geneva apartment, clad
head-to-toe in a skin-colored, latex bodysuit. There were
two bullets in his head and one in his chest. The murder of
one of Europe's richest men sent a shudder through the world
of global finance. Mr. Stern was the dashing heir of a
19th-century banking dynasty. He was also a shrewd
businessman whose ruthlessness over the years had earned him
many enemies. Swiss police quickly cleared up part of the
mystery: Mr. Stern's lover, a 36-year-old woman named Cecile
Brossard, confessed to murdering him. But investigators say
they don't have a clear picture of her motive . . . A
different lawyer for Ms. Brossard says his client committed
a "crime of passion." Under Swiss law, that carries a
shorter prison sentence than premeditated murder. Ms.
Brossard portrays herself as a victim of Mr. Stern's abusive
behavior, someone who lost control in a moment of fury and
grabbed the gun her lover kept in a drawer. For example, she
says through her attorney, Mr. Stern would often promise to
marry her and then renege.
John Carreyrou, Jo Wrighton, and Alessandra Galloni, "How
Banker's Life, Full of Intrigue, Ended in Murder: Monied
Scion Edouard Stern Riled France's Old Guard; Then He Met
Ms. Brossard Dispute Over Eight Chagalls," The Wall
Street Journal, April 14, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111343050917906363,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
A new meaning to the
phrase "closet case"
A man who secretly lived in a
closet at the home of his married girlfriend for a month was
charged Tuesday with beating her husband to death after the
man discovered him sleeping in the storage area. Nashville
police spokesman Don Aaron said Rafael DeJesus Rocha-Perez
of Murfreesboro, Tenn., was charged with criminal homicide
in the beating death of Jeffrey A. Freeman, 44, and ordered
held on $500,000 bail. "From time to time, you come across a
case with very unique — even bizarre — circumstances," Aaron
said. "This one probably rates right up there with them."
"Lover in closet charged with killing cuckold Wife hid
paramour for month before fatal encounter, police say,"
MSNBC, April 13, 2005 ---
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7479996/
Fees for your personal
800 number
Consider an 800 number for the
family. These services have been around for years, but often
with exorbitant per-minute charges. Now prices are dropping,
though they can still add up. Kall8, an add-on to your
regular phone service, costs $2 to set up and $2 a month;
most incoming calls are 6.9 cents a minute. Though the
monthly fees are often higher, traditional phone carriers
offer the service too. AT&T and SBC charge $2.95 a month;
AT&T calls are 15 cents a minute and SBC's per-minute price
is a dime; neither charges a setup fee. Even
Internet-calling companies now have the service. Vonage, for
example, levies a $9.99 setup fee and $4.99 per month, for
100 minutes of calls. Such providers can be attractive for
heavy users.
"Getting an 800 Number," The Wall Street Journal, April 12,
2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111326784334404213,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
The law is not deterring
attacks of some free speech on college campuses
Last
October, two liberals responded to my speech at the
University of Arizona – during question and answer, no less
– by charging the stage and throwing two pies at me from a
few yards away. Fortunately for me, liberals not only argue
like liberals, they also throw like girls. (Apologies in
advance to the Harvard biology professors who walked out on
Larry Summers in a demonstration of their admiration of
"research," not "revelation" – but this may account for the
dearth of female pitchers in Major League Baseball.)
Unfortunately for them, Republican men don't react favorably
to two "Deliverance" boys trying to sucker-punch a 110-pound
female in a skirt and heels. The geniuses ended up with
bloody noses and broken bones. It's really outrageous how
conservatives respond to liberals who are just trying to
engage in a "fact-driven debate." How typical of Republicans
to go on the offensive just because a female has been
physically attacked. Instead of capturing and subduing my
attackers, those strong Republican men should have been
trying to understand why they threw the pies. In the five
months following the liberal ass-whupping in Arizona – I
mean "fact-driven debate" – all was quiet on the Eastern
Front. College liberals still couldn't formulate a coherent
argument, but they seemed to want to avoid ending up in jail
having to explain to their cellmates that they were in for
trying to hit a girl (and missing). Then on March 19, all
charges were dismissed against the "Deliverance" boys –
including a felony charge for $3,000 worth of damage to
school property. Inexplicably, this outcome did not
instantly lead to widespread rioting and looting in South
Central Los Angeles. Democrat Barbara LaWall is the Pima
County attorney who allowed the liberal debate champions to
walk. LaWall brags on her website about "holding criminals
accountable." She didn't say anything about liberals,
however. Be forewarned, conservatives: Do not expect the law
to protect you in Pima County. In the three weeks following
the dismissal of all charges against my attackers, three
more conservatives were attacked on college campuses.
Ann Coulter, "It's Only Funny Until Someone Loses a Pie,"
Front Page Magazine, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.frontpagemagazine.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17711
Kidney Disease and
Treatment
About half of the more than 60,000
people on the waiting list for kidney transplants are age 50
or older. Most transplant recipients typically are younger
than 70, but there are numerous cases of older patients
receiving a successful kidney transplant. Age policies vary
by transplant centers, and some have an age cutoff.
Typically, the patient's overall health and the likelihood
of a successful transplant are the most important factors in
deciding whether a patient is a transplant candidate. In
March, researchers from Wake Forest University Baptist
Medical Center presented new research supporting the idea
that age alone shouldn't prevent older adults from having a
kidney transplant nor should it prevent someone from
donating a kidney. A study of 144 kidney transplants found
that a year after surgery survival rates were comparable --
98% for younger patients and 92% for patients older than 60.
Tara Parker-Pope, "Health Mailbox," The Wall Street
Journal, April 12, 2005, Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111325649364303940,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Hives
In the majority of cases, the
cause of hives cannot be determined. Typically, a doctor
will prescribe allergy medications, antihistamines or
steroid treatments. The drugs often will relieve the
symptom, and the hives disappear in a matter of days or
weeks. Sometimes hives are an allergic reaction to drugs
such as antibiotics or aspirin, or to foods such as
shellfish, nuts or strawberries -- even if the person has
taken them before without a problem. Sometimes a more
serious health problem can trigger hives, including sinus
and urinary-tract infections, candida infections, thyroid
disease, lymphoma and lupus. If the problem persists, your
doctor may want to rule out some of these more serious
conditions.
Tara Parker-Pope, "Health Mailbox," The Wall Street
Journal, April 12, 2005, Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111325649364303940,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Merchants Balk At Higher
Fees For Credit Cards
As a result, a backlash is brewing
among small-business owners who say they are hurt by the fee
creep more than bigger merchants. To fight back, the owners
of 30 Minute Photos, for instance, e-mailed a letter to
25,000 customers on March 31, asking them to contact their
charge-card providers to justify the fee increase. "This is
another one of those opportunities for credit-card companies
to enhance their revenue stream on the backs of merchants,"
says Mitchell Goldstone, co-owner of the Irvine,
Calif.-based photo-developing retailer that also operates a
national online photo service.
Gwendolyn Bounds and Robin Sidel, "Merchants Balk At Higher
Fees For Credit Cards" The Wall Street Journal, April
12, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111326429930704091,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Bob Jensen's threads on dirty
secrets of credit card companies are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#FICO
This comes as no
surprise: Charity has always afforded scam opportunities
The tax laws allow favorable treatment
for donations to charity and for institutions ostensibly
dedicated to good works. But for every tax break that's
legal, there's a scheme to stretch it too far. Abuse in the
charitable world is on the rise, IRS Commissioner Mark
Everson told the Senate last week. Charitable scams account
for part of the billions lost each year in fraudulent
deductions, though the IRS can't say exactly how much. The
Senate Finance Committee is looking into the abuses, which
include people who take inflated deductions for dubious
gifts and foundations that squander money on lavish
salaries. In either case, the federal treasury is cheated,
and other taxpayers must make up the losses. Such charitable
scamming turns tax laws on their head: Deductions meant to
encourage public good works are being hijacked by cheaters
for their own benefit. Leaders in the non-profit world
should be the toughest on these scams, which at times have
soured the public on giving. Instead, they've acted only
after Congress pushed them and have called for only
milquetoast reforms.
"As charitable cheating rises, so does cost to taxpayers
Non-profits fail to enact tough reforms to root out growing
scams," USA Today, April 11, 2005, Page 12A ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050411/edit11.art.htm
Profiteers Heading
Legitimate Charities
Charity executives haul home the
lion's share striking disparity between what nonprofit fat
cats make and industry norms — hundreds of thousands of
dollars in many cases — illustrates a troubling lack of city
oversight, officials say. A whopping 200 executives at
organizations that provide services for the city's have-nots
take home in excess of $150,000 a year. That's more than the
salaries of City Council members, the public advocate and
all the city's district attorneys. Another 12 nonprofiteers
make more than the top nonprofit earners in the entire state
based on the budget size of their groups, according to a
survey of 2002 salaries by the nonprofit watchdog
Guidestar.org.
"$WEET CHARITY FOR EXECS AT NONPROFITS," New York Post,
March 13, 2005 ---
http://www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/42413.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on
charity scams are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#CharityFrauds
Community colleges are
stuffed and overflowing
For community colleges, turning
away qualified students isn’t just something they don’t want
to do, it goes against their entire philosophy. But in the
hallways and in sessions at the annual meeting of the
American Association of Community Colleges, which convened
over the weekend in Boston, leaders of two-year institutions
talked about their frustrations with capacity issues. As
states have cut funds or failed to keep up with enrollment
growth, de facto enrollment limits have been set — and
students are being turned away.
Scott Jaschik, "At Capacity," Inside Higher Ed, April
11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/11/aacc
Google Versus the
Librarians
“The war is over, and Google won,”
said Richard Sweeney, university librarian at the New Jersey
Institute of Technology and a proud Googlelizer. He and Judy
Luther, a consultant on library technology issues, both
praised Google for making information more accessible to a
much broader range of users. Sweeney compared searching in
Google to the kind of video and other gaming that many young
people do, where once a user achieves a certain level of
success, “you can move on to the next level." By offering
simple and advanced searching, Luther said, Google makes
users, particularly young ones, feel “like they’re in
control” and encourages them to do searches and get
results.” Academic librarians, she said, “can build upon
that” over time to transform those young people into
consumers of what the libraries have to offer. She, too,
drew a parallel to gaming, in which players typically try to
“get around” those in positions of responsibility and lean
heavily on their “strategy coaches.”
Doub Lederman, "Google: Friend or Foe?" Inside Higher Ed,
April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/11/google
Being gay does not
necessarily equate to being liberal:
Some prominent conservatives
are openly or privately gay
Arthur J. Finkelstein, a prominent
Republican consultant who has directed a series of
hard-edged political campaigns to elect conservatives in the
United States and Israel over the last 25 years, said Friday
that he had married his male partner in a civil ceremony at
his home in Massachusetts.
Adam Nagourney, "G.O.P. Consultant Weds His Male Partner,"
The New York Times, April 10, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTApr10
The media seems less
interested in Fannie than Enron. Did you ever wonder why?
It’s a familiar story. An enormous
company reveals its “accounting problems.” The problems are
found to be far worse than anyone realized. The CEO is
forced to resign. Other high-ranking executives follow. The
stock price begins to drop. Billions of dollars might be
lost. The politically savvy CEO even has direct connections
to a presidential administration. If the word “Enron” has
formed in your mind, you’d be close, but wrong. Welcome to
Fannie Mae, the nation’s second-largest financial company.
Only Fannie Mae, officially known as the Federal National
Mortgage Association, isn’t like any standard Wall Street
business. It was founded by Congress to increase the amount
of capital available for the secondary mortgage market.
Fannie Mae is a Government Sponsored Entity (GSE) and enjoys
a congressional charter, limited oversight, and a strongly
implied government commitment to cover any losses. This
billion-dollar scandal has highlighted questionable
practices by the lender and the response from America’s
broadcast media has been almost complete silence.
Dan Gainor and Charles Simpson "Government-Sponsored Enron
Billion-Dollar Scandal Not Ready for Prime Time," Free
Market Project, April 4, 2005 ---
http://www.freemarketproject.org/specialreports/2005/fannie_mae/fannie_mae.asp
Bob Jensen's threads on Fannie and Freddie are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
For a case study in how out of
touch the academic community has become, just read
Prof. Luis Suarez-Villa's April 6
Letter to the Editor
in response to the March 29 editorial-page
commentary "Where
Were You on 1/14?"
We have a professor within something called the
"School of Social Ecology" berating economists for
their "pseudo-scientific ways." Now that is rich.
Michael Spires, "Ivory Tower Report," The Wall
Street Journal, April 11, 2005; Page A23 ---
|
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111318529262503191,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
A Foray Into Gay and
Lesbian Networks
We are not out at bars cruising for
anonymous sex," he said. "We are generally at home with our
partners, taking care of a leaking roof and transporting the
cat to the vet because she is coughing. What the gay
community lacks is the same type of general entertainment
that everybody else has." The gay, bisexual and transsexual
communities are about to get a large supply of that
programming. Viacom, the nation's largest owner of cable
networks, is finally set to start Logo, its own
advertiser-supported network aimed at the same market. The
debut, originally scheduled for mid-February, is now set for
June 30.
Geraldine Fabrikant, "A Foray Into Gay and Lesbian
Networks," The New York Times, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/11/business/media/11gay.html?
See evil,
blog no evil: You can attend the hearing but you're not
supposed to blog about it afterwards
Canada's long-standing practice of
barring news organizations from disclosing what's happening
in certain court proceedings is being tested by Internet
bloggers. A Canadian commission that's investigating
charges of high-level wrongdoing in the nation's Liberal
Party has ordered news organizations not to reveal details
from the proceedings, which are open to the public. But Ed
Morrissey, a conservative Web logger in Minneapolis, has
been gleefully violating the ban by
posting detailed reports of the verboten "Adscam" testimony.
Public revelation of Adscam, which
involves allegations of corruption and illegal campaign
contributions, could end the Liberal Party's precarious
grasp on power and force new elections this summer.
Declan McCullagh , "U.S. blogger thwarts Canadian gag
order," CNet News, April 5, 2005 ---
http://news.com.com/U.S.+blogger+thwarts+Canadian+gag+order/2100-1028_3-5656087.html?tag=nefd.ac
Difficult
times for auditors to claim financial statement audits
should not uncover massive fraud
HealthSouth Corp. has filed suit
accusing its former outside auditor, Ernst & Young, of
intentionally or negligently failing to uncover a massive
accounting fraud at the medical services chain.
"HealthSouth Sues Ernst & Young for Fraud," SmartPros,
April 6, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x47712.xml
Bob Jensen's threads on E&Y's legal woes are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
When Smith
Barney talked, the NASD was listening!
It's always serious when the NASD takes action, because the
NASD tends to protect its broker members
Citigroup Inc.'s Smith Barney unit
expressed disappointment with an arbitration ruling awarding
$2.5 million to an investor who alleged he received bad
stock-option advice from brokers in Citigroup's Smith Barney
branch in Atlanta. Smith Barney spokeswoman Kimberly Atwater
said the company was "disappointed with this decision, which
is inconsistent with those made in other cases." Virginia
resident Travis Brown claimed during the National
Association of Securities Dealers hearing that the brokers
advised him to use an "exercise and hold" strategy with his
WorldCom stock options from 1999 to 2000. Mr. Brown's
account lost value as WorldCom's stock price began to tumble
in 2000.
"Ruling Disappoints Smith Barney," The Wall Street Journal,
April 12, 2005; Page A6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111327048205304284,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on "Rotten to the Core" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
What the people
want is very simple - they want an America as good as its
promise.
Barbara Jordan
Political scientist Stephen Zunes says
most governments have double standards when it comes to
foreign policy. This is nothing new. But then, he adds, most
governments aren't presenting themselves as paragons of
democracy the way the United States does. And that has led
to unprecedented national security risks, as other nations
increasingly regard the United States with hostility because
it seems the world's most powerful nation isn't willing to
hold itself to the standards it expects of others, Zunes
said. "If we refuse to play by the rules, why should anyone
else?" Zunes asked. The rhetorical question was central to
the keynote talk Zunes, a professor of politics and chairman
of the Peace and Justice Studies program at the University
of San Francisco, gave during Saturday's Anti-War
Educational Conference at the Salt Lake City Main Library.
Sponsored by the Wasatch Coalition for Peace and Justice and
the Utah Green Party, the talk drew about 50 people.
Patty Henetz, "U.S. gives democracy a bad name, speaker
says." The Salt Lake Tribune, April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.sltrib.com/utah/ci_2648348
Seems like
she gives the finger a bit too often
The woman who claims she bit into a
human finger while eating chili at a Wendy's restaurant has
a history of filing lawsuits - including a claim against
another fast-food restaurant. Anna Ayala, 39, who hired a
San Jose, Calif., attorney to represent her in the Wendy's
case, has been involved in at least half a dozen legal
battles in the San Francisco Bay area, according to court
records. She brought a suit against an ex-boss in 1998 for
sexual harassment and sued an auto dealership in 2000,
alleging the wheel fell off her car. That suit was dismissed
after Ayala fired her lawyer, who said she had threatened
him. The case against her former employer was settled in
arbitration in June 2002, but it was not known whether she
received any money. Speaking through the front door of her
Las Vegas home Friday, Ayala claimed police are out to get
her and were unnecessarily rough as they executed a search
warrant at her home on Wednesday . . . Ayala acknowledged,
however, that her family received a settlement for their
medical expenses about a year ago after reporting that her
daughter, Genesis, got sick from food at an El Pollo Loco
restaurant in Las Vegas. She declined to provide any further
details.
"Woman Claiming Finger in Chili Sues Often," MyWay, April 8,
2005 ---
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050409/D89BJV380.html
Reports of a severed human finger in a bowl of chili at a
Wendy's restaurant have hit the firm's sales in the San
Francisco area, a company spokesman said. "We've had a
severe sales impact from this, particularly in the San
Francisco-San Jose bay area," said spokesman Bob Bertini
from Wendy's corporate headquarters in Dublin, Ohio on
Saturday. "It's very important to us to find out what
happened in this incident. We believe someone knows exactly
how the piece of finger got into the chili bowl," he said.
The company has offered a $US50,000 ($65,000) reward to the
first person offering verifiable information about how the
finger found its way into a bowl of chili at a Wendy's
franchise in San Jose.
"Finger report hits Wendy's sales," Sydney Morning Herald,
April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/10/1113071854936.html
Sounds good,
but there are well known dangers
For years, a company's highest boss
often got rewarded very well for very little performance.
Now, in response to a growing outcry from investors -- and
their increased clout -- more boards are raising the bar
even higher so their leader can't reap supersized pay
without supersized performance. Hints of the nascent trend
include: bonuses partly based on how a company stacks up
against others; difficult triggers for all equity awards;
elimination of guaranteed minimum pay; and severance accords
that forbid windfalls for poor performance.
Joann S. Lublin, "Goodbye to Pay for No Performance," The
Wall Street Journal, April 11, 2005, Page R1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111265005063397590,00.html?mod=todays_us_the_journal_report
Jensen Comment: Much depends upon how "performance" is
evaluated. If it is based on trends in annual earnings this
can be a formula for disaster. A CEO wanting the highest
current bonus available can "eat the company's seed corn" so
to speak. Some items of expense, R&D comes to mind reap a
harvest in future years rather than current years. It is
well known that the CEOs of many companies are willing to
hurt the future in order to get their current bonuses and
other performance-based compensation short-term rewards.
Here come the lawsuits
under the Americans With Disabilities Act
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
11th Circuit ruled this week that the 11th Amendment does
not protect public colleges from lawsuits filed by students
under the Americans With Disabilities Act. The 11th
circuit’s decision overturned a lower federal court’s 2001
ruling in a lawsuit brought against Florida International
University by a group of hearing impaired students. They
contended that the state-funded university had violated the
ADA by failing to provide qualified classroom interpreters
or note takers or to offer other ways for such students to
understand classroom instruction.
Doug Lederman, "Less Immunity for Public Colleges?" Inside
Higher Ed, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/08/disabled
What Makes
Google Click?
Have investors lost their minds?
The dot-com bust proves this is entirely possible. But the
case for the Google boom is that this isn't advertising of
the old kind; it's a reinvention of the business. Old
advertising was predatory, militaristic almost: There were
"campaigns" to "target" passive consumers; the objective was
to score "hits" on them. Googletising is an altogether
gentler art. Ads aren't directed at consumers. They are
directed by them. To understand this change, remember that
the early Internet ventures attempted no such revolution.
America Online and its competitors -- such as Microsoft's
MSN -- embraced the business model of television and the
print media: Lure customers with news and entertainment; do
everything possible to keep them on your own pages; sell
advertising space that's priced according to how many eyes
will see it. This model encouraged advertising that clamored
rudely for consumers' attention -- banner ads equipped with
catchy tunes, videos that pull your eyes away from static
text and those infuriating pop-ups.
Sebastian Mallaby, "What Makes Google Click," Washington
Post, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A42690-2005Apr10.html?referrer=email
Team of
bloggers searches for the best of the new
novels
It isn’t a prize or
an award, exactly. But next month, the
Litblog Co-op
— a consortium of 20 literary bloggers —
will announce the first novel it has
selected for its quarterly “Read This”
campaign. The participants will urge their
audiences to buy the book, and will open
discussions of it at their respective Web
sites.
Scott McLemee, "Read This," Inside Higher
Ed, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/11/mclemee4_11
Nobody defends this type
of journalism fraud
Mitch Albom, one of Detroit's most
prominent figures, is a one-man multimedia entity as a
nationally known sports columnist, radio and TV personality,
best-selling author and playwright. He added another role
this week--one no journalist wants. Albom is making news
rather than reporting it, under suspension from the Detroit
Free Press until the newspaper completes an investigation of
a fabrication in an Albom column that ran last Sunday.
Reaction in the journalism community, from columnist peers
to college instructors, ranged from harsh to empathetic. But
no one excused or forgave Albom's or his copy editors'
errors in judgment. And no one dismissed those mistakes as
insignificant.
Michael Hersley, "No one's defending renowned journalist
Peers, educators critical of Detroit's Mitch Albom for
reporting something that didn't happen," Chicago Tribune,
April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/chi-0504100370apr10,1,5217277.story?ctrack=1&cset=true
I hope this
becomes reality before cell phone conversations are allowed
in flight
If
researchers at the DARPA, the US Department of Defense's
research agency is to be believed, people could soon be
having conversations on their mobile phones, but without
uttering a sound. The agency, is working on a project known
as Advanced Speech Encoding, aimed at replacing microphones
with non-acoustic sensors that detect speech via the
speaker's nerve and muscle activity, rather than sound
itself.
"Soon you can talk on your mobile without uttering a word!"
Web India, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.webindia123.com/news/showdetails.asp?id=76497&cat=Science
New money often equates
to new fraud
It was a signature plan of Bill
Clinton's presidency: Attack the rising crime rates of the
early 1990s by putting 100,000 more cops on America's
streets. Ten years later, the grant program known as COPS
(for Community Oriented Policing Services) has given $10
billion to help more than 12,000 police agencies hire and
reassign officers. Politicians and police chiefs across the
nation have said that COPS is a big reason for the sharp
decline in crime rates that began in the late 1990s. But
now, with the largest buildup of local law enforcement in
U.S. history winding down, a lessflattering view of the COPS
program is emerging: Federal audits of just 3% of all COPS
grants have alleged that $277 million was misspent. Tens of
thousands of jobs funded by the grants were never filled, or
weren't filled for long, auditors found. And there's little
evidence that COPS was a big factor in reducing crime.
Peter Eisler and Kevin Johnson, "10 years and $10B later,
COPS drawing scrutiny Auditors find abuses, fraud in federal
program," USA Today, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050411/copscover.art.htm
If he didn't feel up to
it he could've at least acknowledged his two invitations
We've learned from a source in a position to know (but not
willing to be identified) that Mr. Carter was actually
offered a seat in the delegation "twice," but turned it down
both times. This wouldn't be the first time Mr. Carter has
snubbed this President Bush. In 2002, he eagerly collected a
Nobel Peace Prize awarded in a clear attempt to discredit
the then-looming Iraq war. Nor would it be the first time he
snubbed the papacy. Two popes died on President Carter's
watch but he dispatched his wife to one funeral and his
mother to the other. At the time, some criticized Mr. Carter
for missing an opportunity to disavow lingering
anti-Catholic bigotry in the evangelical circles from which
he sprang. At 80, Mr. Carter can't be blamed if he just
didn't feel up to the hurly-burly of a papal funeral with
two million other attendees. It would have been better just
to say so, however, instead of adopting a martyr pose and
feeding an unnecessary and unflattering controversy
Brendan Miniter, Notable and Quotable, The Wall Street
Journal, April 11, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111317354767802992,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Flashback
The Wall Street Journal, April 12,
1963
The FCC, in collaboration with the
Justice Department, has proposed a tight new set of rules to
halt what it terms "a significant increase in the broadcast
of horse racing information." An exception would permit
broadcasting the Kentucky Derby...
WOW (Breakthrough in interpreting Oxyrhynchus Papyri)
For more than a century, it has
caused excitement and frustration in equal measure – a
collection of Greek and Roman writings so vast it could
redraw the map of classical civilisation. If only it was
legible. Now, in a breakthrough described as the classical
equivalent of finding the holy grail, Oxford University
scientists have employed infra-red technology to open up the
hoard, known as the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, and with it the
prospect that hundreds of lost Greek comedies, tragedies and
epic poems will soon be revealed. In the past four days
alone, Oxford’s classicists have used it to make a series of
astonishing discoveries, including writing by Sophocles,
Euripides, Hesiod and other literary giants of the ancient
world, lost for millennia. They even believe they are likely
to find lost Christian gospels, the originals of which were
written around the time of the earliest books of the New
Testament. The original papyrus documents, discovered in an
ancient rubbish dump in central Egypt, are often meaningless
to the naked eye – decayed, worm-eaten and blackened by the
passage of time. But scientists using the new photographic
technique, developed from satellite imaging, are bringing
the original writing back into view. Academics have hailed
it as a development which could lead to a 20 per cent
increase in the number of great Greek and Roman works in
existence. Some are even predicting a “second Renaissance”.
Arthur Silber, "WOW (Breakthrough in interpreting
Oxyrhynchus Papyri)," Free Republic, April 17, 2005
---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1385405/posts
Satellite Radio Craze
Satellite radio use has increased
to 5 million subscribers and, by some estimates, will top 8
million by year's end. If that happens, adoption of the
service will surpass the speed with which cell phone use
took off. Consider this for a moment: Users are rushing to
pay for a service that has been available for free since
listeners crowded around the first crackly transistors a
century ago. That's because what they are paying for with
satellite radio suits their tastes far better than the
formulaic one-size-fits-all fare of the corporate-controlled
commercial airwaves.
Pedro Pereira, "Vendors Targeting SMBs Must First Know Their
Audience," The Channel Insider, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.thechannelinsider.com/article2/0,1759,1784555,00.asp
Distance Education Craze
The Education
Department offered its findings in its third
annual
report
to Congress on the Distance Education
Demonstration Program, which Congress
created when it renewed the Higher Education
Act in 1998. Among other things, the program
waives for participating institutions a
regulation that bars from federal financial
aid programs colleges that (1) offer more
than half their courses via distance
education or (2) enroll more than half of
their students in online programs. The
regulation, known as the “50 percent rule,”
was drafted in 1992 to rein in the rapid
growth of fraudulent diploma mills and
correspondence schools.The demonstration
program now includes
24 colleges:
nine for-profit institutions, including five
publicly traded ones; seven private
nonprofit institutions; four public
universities and one public system; and
three consortiums. (Another four
participants have left the program
voluntarily and one, Masters Institute, was
removed after it was found to have
“improperly” administered federal aid funds,
the department said.)
Doug Lederman, "Expanding Access Via
Distance Ed,"
Inside Higher Ed, April
13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/13/distance
Officials at the major
higher education
associations don’t
disagree with the
Education Department and
Republican House leaders
that the distance
education project has
been a success, and that
the department should
continue to waive
federal financial aid
regulations, including
the 50 percent rule, for
credible colleges. In
fact, in the
joint proposal
for extending the Higher
Education Act that they
prepared in 2003, about
three dozen college
groups encouraged
Congress to turn the
Distance Education
Demonstration Program
into a permanent one.
But just because the
program has been
successful does not mean
that Congress should
abandon the 50 percent
rule altogether, Becky
Timmons, director of
government relations at
the American Council of
Education, said in an
interview Tuesday.
“One enormous
opportunity for abuse in
distance education is
rapid expansion,” said
Timmons. Right now, she
said, “anybody who wants
to go above 50 percent
can with a waiver from
the department, and we
think that’s wise. It
ensures an extra level
of supervision by the
department, but doesn’t
stop anybody who has an
authentic program to go
above” that threshold.
Employees
doing personal things on the job at an
increasing rate
Eighty per cent of UK employees admitted to
taking part in these sorts of non-work
activities - termed 'desk skiving' - in a
recent survey sponsored by Captor Group, an
HR management solutions company. And they
are spending considerable time on tasks such
as browsing news sites, conducting personal
research via search engines, sending
personal texts and shopping online. Just how
much? A third of respondents said they spent
15 to 30 minutes a day on personal
activities - equivalent to 14 days per year
- while eight per cent said they spent more
than two hours a day.
Sylvia Carr, "'Desk skiving' popular with UK
workers," Silicon.com, April 13, 2005 ---
http://management.silicon.com/careers/0,39024671,39129512,00.htm
Labor officials doing personal things
at an increasing rate
But Mr. Yud
said that if the department
(Department of Labor)
had been doing audits
as vigorously as in decades past, it might
have prevented corruption like the
embezzlement of more than $2.5 million by
leaders of the Washington Teachers Union.
Among the items bought with the stolen union
money were a $57,000 Tiffany tea service for
24, a $13,000 plasma television and a
$20,000 custom-tailored mink coat. There
were also the 277 checks totaling $41,309
that the secretary of an autoworkers' local
wrote to herself over two and a half years,
and the dues money stolen by the office
secretary of a Minnesota plumbers' local,
who, in ultimately pleading guilty, agreed
to repay $54,469. Since 2001, department
officials say, more than 500 union officials
have been indicted on charges including
fraud and embezzlement.
Steven Greenhouse, "Labor Dept. Plans
Increasing Scrutiny of Union Finances,"
The New York Times, April 17, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTlabor
Davidson College's decision to allow
non-Christian Board members
Two leading
trustees of Davidson College have quit their
positions to protest the board’s decision to
allow non-Christians to serve on it. One of
the trustees — John Belk — is Davidson’s
most generous donor.Belk and the other
trustee, Stephen Smith, were not available
for comment Tuesday. The Charlotte Observer
(free registration required)
disclosed
their resignations, which were confirmed by
Davidson officials.The Observer quoted Belk
as saying that he did not object to
non-Christians teaching or enrolling at the
college, but that he thought the board
should remain entirely Christian. “I think
Davidson ought to be a Christian school,”
Belk said. “I think that is one reason why
Davidson is special, a little different from
anyone else,” he said.
Scott Jaschik, "Lose Faith," Inside
Higher Ed, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/13/religion
The first tunnel to China has punched through the
earth's crust
Scientist said this week they had
drilled into the lower section of Earth's crust for the
first time and were poised to break through to the mantle in
coming years. The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP)
seeks the elusive "Moho," a boundary formally known as the
Mohorovicic discontinuity. It marks the division between
Earth's brittle outer crust and the hotter, softer mantle.
The depth of the Moho varies. This latest effort, which
drilled 4,644 feet (1,416 meters) below the ocean seafloor,
appears to have been 1,000 feet off to the side of where it
needed to be to pierce the Moho, according to one reading of
seismic data used to map the crust's varying thickness.
Robert Roy Britt, "Hole Drilled to Bottom of Earth's Crust,
Breakthrough to Mantle Looms." Live Science, April 7, 2005
---
http://www.livescience.com/technology/050407_earth_drill.html
If they only realized how much this habit will hurt
them if they try to advance upward in life
Dan Horwich's English class is a
bastion of clean language, where students read the classics
and have weighty discussions free of invective and
profanity. But when the bell rings and they walk out his
door, the hallway vibrates with talk of a different sort.
"The kids swear almost incessantly," said Horwich, who
teaches at Guildford High School in Rockford, Ill. "They are
so used to swearing and hearing it at home, and in the
movies, and on TV, and in the music they listen to that they
have become desensitized to it."
Valerie Strauss, "More and More, Kids say the Foulest Things
(swearing)? Washington Post, April 12, 2005 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1382181/posts
How to beat the alternative minimum tax
It is a very small club -- but one
that has expanded rapidly in recent years. Its members:
people earning $200,000 or more a year who manage, through
perfectly legal means, to pay no federal income taxes. The
key to admission into this exclusive group is eluding not
only the regular income tax but also the alternative minimum
tax, or AMT, which was designed several decades ago to
prevent just this sort of thing from happening. It is
possible despite the fact that the AMT's reach has been
expanding rapidly. This year, nearly four million people
will owe additional taxes because of the AMT. Next year, if
Congress does nothing to change the rules, more than 20
million people will owe more.
"Earn $1 Million And Pay No Tax : A Small but Growing Club
Of High-Income Filers Legally Avoids IRS's Grasp, Despite
the AMT, The Wall Street Journal, April 13, 2005;
Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111334797905605211,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
How not to beat the alternative minimum tax
Steven D. Shanklin of Austin earned
$876,398 in 1998 and filed a tax return claiming he owed
none of it to Uncle Sam, according to a federal indictment.
The Cisco Systems Sales and Services Inc. employee made
$770,504 in 1999 and $681,955 in 2000 and didn't file a
federal tax return in either year, the indictment says.
Shanklin, 48, wrote in a letter attached to his 1998 return
that he knew of "no section of the Internal Revenue Code
that . . . establishes an income tax 'liability,' "
according to the indictment, handed up by a federal grand
jury in Austin last week. Internal Revenue Service agents
and federal prosecutors disagreed, and Shanklin now faces up
to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each of three
counts of tax evasion.
Steven Kratak, "IRS: Man refused to pay his taxes Austinite
earned $2 million, said he owed zero, indictment says,"
North American Statesman, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.statesman.com/news/content/metro/stories/04/13tax.html
Decline in MBA applications to elite schools is partly
blamed on accounting boom
It may never be this easy to get
into a top MBA program, according to an article in the new
issue of Business Week. An analysis prepared for the
magazine found that applications to the top 30 business
schools are off 30 percent since 1998, with some
experiencing declines of 50 percent. According to the
magazine, some business schools are quietly reducing the
size of their entering classes as a result. . . . Fernandes
said that demand is especially high right now for
accountants, and that many accounting majors who would have
applied to business school a few years back no longer feel
the need to do so. He also said that the quality of top
business schools remains high — they may be rejecting fewer
students, he said, but those that they admit are as talented
as ever.
Scott Jaschik, "Are B-Schools Up or Down?" Inside Higher
Ed, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/13/mba
He just wanted to give his wife a little token of his
love
Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg
gave $2.2 billion of American International Group Inc.
shares to his wife -- or more than 90% of his stake -- a few
days before stepping down as chief executive of the company,
according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing
yesterday. After making the gift and exercising the stock
options, Mr. Greenberg reported retaining 1.95 million AIG
shares directly, a stake valued at slightly less than $104
million at yesterday's New York Stock Exchange closing price
of $53.20. In AIG's 2004 proxy filing, Mr. Greenberg
reported owning or controlling 45.3 million shares as of
Jan. 31, 2004. In addition to the shares transferred to his
wife last month, Mr. Greenberg reported indirect ownership
of 23.7 million shares -- valued at $1.26 billion --
including shares held in trust for children and
grandchildren.
Theo Francis, "Greenberg Gives Wife $2.2 Billion Of AIG
Shares," The Wall street Journal, April 13, 2005,
Page C5 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111336044535705552,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Afterwards he takes his Fifth Amendment right against
self-incrimination "dozens of times" ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/13/business/13insure.html
This is a brave cop with a low life expectancy: His
may be the toughest job in the world
Since taking charge of the new
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mr. Ribadu has
pursued oil mobsters, Internet fraudsters and corrupt
politicians. The former street cop has 185 active fraud and
corruption cases working their way through the courts, up
from zero before the commission started its work two years
ago. Working in the capital of Abuja from an office
overlooking goats grazing in a vacant lot, the wiry
44-year-old has locked up 200 alleged smugglers and seized
$700 million in property, including a collection of office
buildings, from suspects in oil smuggling and other crimes.
Royal Dutch/Shell Group, whose joint venture with the state
petroleum company pumps about half of Nigeria's oil, says
the amount of crude stolen from its network has fallen by
almost half since early last year.
Chip Cummins, "A Nigerian Cop Cracks Down On a Vast Black
Market in Oil," Mr. Ribadu Pursues Smugglers Of Up to $3
Billion a Year; A Drain on Investment," The Wall Street
Journal, April 13, 2005, Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111334157041705046,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Jensen Comment: Mr. Ribadu also hopes to stop Nigerian mail
and eMail Internet fraud. We wish him great success, but we
aren't holding our breath.
Nanotubes in your future
At IBM, Infineon (IFX ), NEC
(NIPNY ), and a clutch of startups, the leading candidate to
replace silicon is the ethereal carbon nanotube. This tiny
molecule -- 100,000 lined up side by side are about as thick
as a human hair -- promises to make circuits faster, less
power-hungry, and more densely packed than anything possible
today. And they could vastly simplify the way chips are
made. Even though such transistors are still in their
infancy, says IBM's Avouris, "Carbon nanotubes can get
around most of the problems that doom very small silicon
devices." In the lab, he has backed this statement up. It
took him four years to assemble his current,
third-generation prototype of a carbon nanotube transistor,
but in the end, the device can carry up to 1,000 times the
current of the copper wires used in today's silicon chips,
making it vastly more efficient.
Adam Aston, "The Coming Chip Revolution Facing the limits of
silicon, scientists are turning to carbon nanotubes,"
Business Week, April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_16/b3929120_mz018.htm
Is there an Apple in your future? There probably will
be in mine.
Apple Computer said on Tuesday
that it would begin selling the fifth version of its
Macintosh OS X operating system later this month . . . The
program, which is named Macintosh OS X 10.4 Tiger and will
sell for $129, has a variety of new features and some new
internal technologies, as well as improved compatibility
with Microsoft's Windows.
John Markoff, "Apple to Start Selling New Macintosh
Operating System," The New York Times, April 13, 2005
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/13/technology/13apple.html?
Where have all the great programmers gone?
American universities -- once the
dominant force in the information technology world -- fell
far down the ranks in a widely watched international
computer programming contest held this week. The University
of Illinois tied for 17th place in the world finals of the
Association for Computing Machinery International Collegiate
Programming Contest. That's the weakest result for the
United States in the 29-year history of the competition.
Birgitta Forsberg, "American universities fall way behind in
programming Weakest result for U.S. in 29-year history of
international technology competition," SF Gate, April
9, 2005 ---
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/04/09/BUG9EC5LBI1.DTL
Is she really serious? This shows how twisted some
Germans reason
Germany's highest ranking female
member of parliament has a new theory: the US government set
the Catholic pedophilia scandal in motion because it wanted
to weaken an already frail pope. That's also why it made
Poland its chief partner in the Iraq war: to make the
Vatican look bad . . . First, in Sept. 2002, then-Justice
Minister Herta Däubler-Gmelin compared George W. Bush to
Adolf Hitler. Then came Andreas von Buelow, the former
federal education and research minister whose 2003
conspiracy theory alleging the CIA and Israeli intelligence
were responsible for the 9/11 attacks in New York and
Washington made for a best-selling book. Now Vollmer comes
along, implying that the US government chose to draw
attention to the Catholic pedophilia scandal not because of
the crimes in and of themselves, but because Washington
wanted to weaken the pope.
"Trans-Atlantic Conspiracy Theory Du Jour," Spiegel Online,
April 11, 2005 ---
http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0,1518,350763,00.html
Jensen Comment: These are just a few of the clues why
Germans cannot solve their enormous economic crisis. Some
are too busy promoting outrageous conspiracy theories on how
we deliberately killed thousands of our own people on 9/11
and created phony scandals about pedophile priests. One
thing is certain. There is nothing on earth that would
convince that woman that the United States is not
responsible for all evils of the world.
Bob Jensen suggests otherwise at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
Study Finds Shortcoming in New Law on Education
One of the more ominous findings,
the researchers said, is that the achievement gap between
white and nonwhite students could soon widen. Closing the
gap is one of the driving principles of the law, and so far
states say they have made strides toward shrinking it. But
minority students with the same test scores as their white
counterparts at the beginning of the school year ended up
falling behind by the end of it, the study found. Both
groups made academic progress, but the minority students did
not make as much, it concluded, an outcome suggesting that
the gaps in achievement will worsen.
Greg Winter, "Study Finds Shortcoming in New Law on
Education," The New York Times, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/13/national/13child.html
Help prevent discrimination against Mulims
The United Nations Commission on Human Rights called on
Tuesday for combating defamation of religions, especially
Islam, and condemned discrimination against Muslims in the
West's war on terrorism. The 53-member state forum adopted a
resolution, presented by Pakistan on behalf of the
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), deploring the
intensification of a "campaign of defamation" against
Muslims following the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.
Stephanie Nebehay, "U.N. Calls for Combating 'Defamation' of
Islam," Reuters, April 12, 2005 ---
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=8157194
Wanted: Outgoing women to work in Antarctica
The organization is looking for
female electricians, plumbers, carpenters, steel erectors,
chefs and boat handlers to work for 6-18 months at its five
research stations on and around the Antarctic. "Where else
can you work in an environment surrounded by penguins, seals
and icebergs and climb down a crevasse during your lunch
hour?" said Jill Thomson, head of building services at the
BAS.
"Wanted: Outgoing women to work in Antarctica U.K.
organization seeks females for remote posts," Reuters,
April 12, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7476938
Jensen Comment: When we were staying in a hotel in
Christchurch, New Zealand we met some women who had been
trying for weeks to get across to the Antarctic. The weather
just would not break for their flight. They would not see
their families (including kids) for two years. I think the
title “outgoing” is funny since the weather is not conducive
to getting out much. The women we met had recently retired
from the Navy and were attracted by high pay as well as
adventure.
Should prisons allow
inmates to marry each other?
The state Department of
Correction has denied permission to two male inmates to
marry at a state facility for sex offenders, according to a
letter signed by the prison superintendent and obtained by
the Globe yesterday.
Essie
Billingslea and Bruce Hatt, committed to the Massachusetts
Treatment Center, requested permission to marry in early
February. Superintendent Robert Murphy denied it because of
"very serious security concerns," and yesterday, Governor
Mitt Romney's chief spokesman said the governor agreed with
the decision. "A wedding/marriage between you and resident
Bruce Hatt would present a significant security risk to the
Massachusetts Treatment Center and the Department of
Correction," Murphy wrote in a March 23 letter to
Billingslea. "A marriage between two residents . . . would
have a direct impact on the orderly running of the
facility."
Yvonne Abraham and
Janette Neuwahl, "Male Inmates' Bid To Marry Denied,"
Boston Globe, April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.lexisone.com/news/nlibrary/b041305h.html
Our Post-Bubble World
The real puzzle is why required
real rates of return are unusually low in the U.S. and
abroad (as confirmed, for example, by the inflation-indexed
yield of 1.8% offered in the U.K. government bond market).
The answer is that we are to some extent still in a
post-bubble world, in which there is an excess of global
saving compared with perceived profitable global investment
opportunities. In the late '90s bubble, the opposite was the
case and rapid (in retrospect unsustainable) world
investment rates surged ahead of savings, pushing up real
interest rates (TIPS yields were at 4% in March 2000 when
the bubble peaked). Although no one can say for sure how
long the present imbalance between saving and investment
will persist, it seems clear that this global imbalance is
at the heart of the "conundrum." As Robert Mundell has
taught us, in a world of excess saving relative to
investment, not only will real interest rates be driven
down, but some country or group of countries must run
current-account deficits to absorb the excess saving.
Because of the role of the dollar in international finance
and the success of U.S. monetary policy at producing low and
stable inflation, the U.S. capital markets are absorbing a
great deal of this excess global saving via the
current-account deficit. Were this deficit to fall in half
overnight, the world saving-investment imbalance would
worsen, and larger current-account deficits would be shifted
elsewhere and/or a contraction in global growth would
result. Mr. Greenspan's conundrum and the current-account
deficit are really two sides of the same coin.
Richard Clarida, "Our Post-Bubble World," The Wall Street
Journal, April 11, 2005, Page A22 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111318380010303154,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Leaders push in-state tuition for undocumented
immigrants
A move is under way to offer
undocumented immigrants in-state tuition rates at North
Carolina's public universities and community colleges. A
bill introduced today in the N.C. House would allow
undocumented students to pay in-state tuition at campuses if
they have attended a North Carolina high school for at least
four years and graduated. Bill sponsors estimate about 500
to 1,300 students could apply each year under the rules.
Students would have to meet academic qualifications to
enroll. The bill has bipartisan support, with 31
co-sponsors, and prominent business leaders, school
superintendents and university faculty backing it. At a news
conference this morning at the legislative building, two
Democrats and two Republican House sponsors spoke in favor
of the bill. So did former Gov. Jim Hunt, who said it may be
the most important economic development legislation in the
General Assembly this year. "This bill is to benefit
longtime residents of North Carolina -- students who have
attended our schools, who have done well, who have qualified
to get into our universities and who we need to have go
there," Hunt said. "It is morally right and it is
economically necessary for our state."
Jane Stancill, "Leaders push in-state tuition for
undocumented immigrants," The News & Observer, April 12,
2005 ---
http://www.newsobserver.com/news/story/2305159p-8684090c.html
Forwarded message from a friend
Bob,
I talk to
my brother with Yahoo! Messenger through a feature
called "Voice Chat."
I was
surprised the first time we tried it. He sounds as
if he's in the room with me.
I don't
know how skype works, but Yahoo! Messenger is really
simple--
you only
need DSL, a microphone, and speakers.
The only downside I
have found with Yahoo! Messenger is that if you sign
in and your status is "available" you will get spam
from other Yahoo! users (I guess you could call them
Yahoos!). However, there are many choices for
"status" including: "invisible to everyone",
"busy", "stepped out", "be right back", "not at my
desk", and "one the phone".
We usually e-mail
first, before signing in to Yahoo! Messenger.
I find the other
features of Yahoo!Messenger to be a waste of
time--too gimmicky--cutesy--teeny-bopper stuff. You
can also place calls through the Call Center, which
has a rate schedule...I've never used that, so can't
comment on it. I suppose there are some issues with
Voice Chat--haven't investigated, but I would guess
privacy would be the main one. Right?
Bob Jensen's threads on telephones and security are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#UnlistedPhoneNumbers
Music: Crazy (about
Patsy): Turn speakers up! ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/crazy.htm
Crazy: Accounting rules are blamed for failure to
stockpile children's vaccines
Although opinions differ, it
appears that the Pediatric Vaccine Stockpile has become an
innocent bystander wounded in the government's crackdown on
deceptive accounting practices. Vaccine supply dwindles No
one has accused the vaccine manufacturers of wrongdoing.
However, they can no longer treat as revenue the money they
get when they sell millions of doses of vaccine to the
stockpile because the shots are not delivered until the
government calls for them in emergencies. Instead, the vials
are held in the manufacturers' warehouses, where they are
considered unsold in the eyes of auditors, investors and
Wall Street . . .The ranking Democrat on the Committee on
Government Reform, Waxman said he is willing to sponsor
legislation to carve out a legal exception that would allow
companies to "recognize" revenue from sales to the vaccine
stockpile — if such a radical step becomes necessary. One of
the companies, however, said its problem is not with
"revenue recognition" but with the details of managing the
vaccine inventory. Other parties were reluctant to discuss
possible solutions or who, if anyone, is to blame for the
empty shelves. The SEC, which enforces accounting practices,
would not speak on the record. HHS officials would not make
available the person talking to the SEC on the matter. The
department referred questions to its subordinate agency, the
CDC, whose officials said important decisions about the
stockpile are being made at the department level.
"Pediatric vaccine stockpile at risk Many drug makers
hesitant to supply government," Washington Post via
MSNBC, April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7529480/
Bob Jensen's threads on revenue accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Battle for Canada's underground resources
While Congress debates whether to
allow oil and gas drilling in Alaska's Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge, a similar battle with much higher stakes is
under way in northwest Canada. The $6 billion Mackenzie
Pipeline project would open the Canadian Arctic for natural
gas drilling and send the gas 800 miles south down the
Mackenzie River Valley to Alberta. There, much of this fuel
would be used to throttle up production in a huge but
hard-to-tap supply of petroleum dispersed in underground
gravel formations. These so-called oil sands hold petroleum
reserves that are second in size only to Saudi Arabia's, and
analysts say they could supply a large portion of U.S.
energy needs for decades to come. But the project has
sparked opposition from some native tribal groups, which
call it a federal grab of their ancestral lands, and from
environmentalists, who say it would churn out greenhouse
gases linked to global warming. It is a fight that is likely
to forever set the course for Canada's vast and empty north.
The project is full of continental superlatives -- North
America's richest oil patch, its biggest construction
project since the Alaska pipeline in the 1970s, its largest
strip-mining operation. "By far the most important thing for
North America are those oil sands in Canada," said Robert
Esser, director of oil and gas resources at Cambridge Energy
Research Associates in New York. "It's nice we're going to
have access to (the Alaska refuge), but there are a lot of
unknown questions there. We have no idea whether there is
oil or gas or how much. In the oil sands, we know the
reserves are huge, much larger than in Alaska." The Canadian
government, which calls the project an economic necessity,
is not required to seek approval.
Robert Collier, "Battle for Canada's underground resources
Some tribes oppose pipeline to tap land rich in oil
reserves," San Francisco Chronicle, March 24, 2005
---
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/03/24/BUG8MBTQPS1.DTL&type=printable
America's Allies in the Rebuilding of Iraq
PRIME MINISTER John Howard has
farewelled Australia's Iraq-bound troops, wishing them the
prayers and support of all Australians. Members of the Al
Muthanna Task Group (AMTG) have already begun departing for
southern Iraq, with the navy's heavy-lift ship HMAS Tobruk
setting sail from Darwin with 200 crew and 20 Australian
light armoured vehicles (ASLAVs) amid little fanfare today.
The troops, mainly from Darwin's 1st Brigade, will be
deployed by sea and air progressively over the next month.
Mr Howard, joined by Defence Minister Robert Hill, and
defence chief General Peter Cosgrove, attended a relaxed
barbecue to formally farewell the bulk of the troops at
Darwin's Robertson Barracks late this afternoon. He also
announced the new head of the defence force Air Marshal
Angus Houston, who will replace General Cosgrove in July. Mr
Howard told the soldiers and their families they were
greatly admired by the Australian people, who wished them a
safe mission as they replaced 1,400 Dutch soldiers in
providing security for Japanese military engineers.
"Tobruk spearheads Iraq mission," Herald Sun, April
17, 2005 ---
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5478,15000055^1702,00.html
Insurance protection going down the drain
Both men had coverage from a
company called Reciprocal of America. Their lives, and those
of thousands of other doctors and lawyers in the South and
the Midwest, have been in flux since Reciprocal cratered
about two years ago amid a tangled web of business
transactions that regulators describe as fraudulent. Tremors
from the Reciprocal investigation would soon reverberate in
the boardrooms of much bigger insurers. But as the inquiries
into esoteric insurance practices spread, making their way
around Wall Street, the fallout from some of the industry's
abuses was already becoming apparent on Main Street. People
who relied on Reciprocal, and held malpractice policies that
evaporated without warning, say they feel betrayed by
convoluted financial dealings that they barely understand.
"All of a sudden your lawyer calls you and tells you: 'Guess
what? Your insurer just went under,' " said Dr. Schroeder,
41, a father of two. "You panic, because you have no idea
what's going to happen." Reciprocal, which was based in
Richmond, Va., once claimed to do what all insurers do:
soften the impact of uncertainty, pain and financial damages
that accompany life's misfortunes. Today, its demise has
emerged as a signature case in a series of investigations of
insurance abuses. Regulators contend that Reciprocal, aided
by outside business partners - including General Re - used
financial gimmicks to mask serious problems and benefit
insiders for more than a decade, until the company
foundered.
"The Insurance Scandal Shakes Main Street," The New York
Times, April 17, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/17/business/yourmoney/17vict.html?
Pulling the plug on science?
For decades, American scientists have unlocked nature's
secrets, generated an enormous number of patents, and earned
a string of Nobel Prizes. These days, however, pride of
accomplishment is mingling with angst as Washington
contemplates research cuts on everything from space weather
to high-energy physics. The concern? The United States
unwittingly may be positioning itself for a long, steady
decline in basic research - a key engine for economic growth
- at a time when competitors from Europe and Asia are hot on
America's heels
Peter N. Spotts, "Pulling the plug on science? From Voyager
spacecraft to atom smashers, America's long-term research
faces an era of budget cuts," Christian Science Monitor,
April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0414/p14s01-stss.html
Not pulling the plug on DHEA: Should you be taking
these things?
Sports officials had favored an
overall ban on steroids and related pills, like DHEA, which
is banned by the Olympics, the World Anti-Doping Agency, the
National Collegiate Athletics Association, the National
Football League, the National Basketball Association and
baseball minor leagues. Major League Baseball is the
exception on banning DHEA, and at last month's congressional
hearings, the top medical adviser to the league turned the
tables on lawmakers, accusing them of failing to write
zero-tolerance toward steroids into federal law. Baseball
officials complain that the legal loophole has made it
harder for them to ban DHEA in their own drug policy, which
is already under fire. "It is difficult, from a collective
bargaining perspective, to explain to people why they should
ban a substance that the federal government says you can buy
at a nutrition center," said Rob Manfred, executive vice
president for labor relations at Major League Baseball.
Anne E. Kornblut and Duff Wilson, "How One Pill Escaped a
Place on List of Controlled Steroids," The New York Times,
April 17, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTdhea
Jensen Comment: I recall that years ago DHEA was a cover
story in Time Magazine. I started taking DHEA
because of the good things written about it in Time.
Never once was the S-word or "dangerous substance" ever
mentioned. I think I will drop DHEA from my pill regimen.
Market declines for arrogant liberal newspapers
Thus, editors convening here
this week at the annual meeting of the American Society of
Newspaper Editors did what editors often do when they gather
in a group. They tortured themselves with
self-recrimination. What are we doing wrong? Why are
circulations dropping? Why do they hate us? Our beloved
newspaper industry is in trouble, you may have heard.
Between declining public trust in old "dead tree" media,
dips in circulation and advertising revenues, competition
from new digital media, not to mention relentless pressure
from those fact-checking whippersnappers hurling deadeye
darts from the blogosphere, newspapers are in a bit of a
slump . . . In life, it
is good to know oneself, but in business, it is crucial to
know one's customers. As most ordinary Americans know, there
are lots of ways to be smart and lots of ways to be dumb and
not all are quantifiable. Common sense, street smarts and
country wisdom aren't measured by standardized tests,
diplomas or resumes. If newspapers die, it won't be because
journalists were smarter than their readers.
Kathleen Parker, "Media elite debate whether the media
are elite," Jewish World Review, April 15, 2005 ---
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/kathleen/parker041505.php3
Tripled Earnings: Southwest Airlines just seems to
get it better than the competition
Southwest Airlines' shrewd use of
fuel hedges allowed it to fend off skyrocketing oil costs
and nearly triple its profit to $76 million in the first
quarter, preserving its place as a rare bright spot in a
troubled industry. Southwest is the first U.S. airline to
report its financial results for the quarter, and analysts
expect it to be mostly downhill from here, with JetBlue
Airways the only other airline believed to have had a
profitable first quarter. "There's a very, very difficult
competitive environment out there," Gary Kelly, Southwest's
chief executive, told analysts in a conference call. But he
added, "We're as prepared as I think we can be, and we're
certainly better prepared than anybody else."
Susan Warren, "Southwest Airlines Reports Profit Almost
Tripled," The Wall Street Journal, April 15, 2005;
Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111264820822497503,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's tutorials on how to account for fuel and other
hedges are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Discriminating between large and small employers:
Maryland may be pulling the plug on new Wal-Marts and other
large businesses
The legislation requires a
company with more than 10,000 employees to spend at least 8
percent of its payroll on worker health care. Otherwise, the
company must pay the difference into a state fund to expand
health coverage. Wal-Mart is the only firm that would be
affected. State governments typically have been quicker than
the federal government to adopt new ideas. With conservative
leadership in Washington, liberal groups have found success
in recent years on issues such as gay rights in Vermont and
medical marijuana in California. The SEIU found a fertile
climate in Maryland for its push for employee health care
benefits because of previous work by the state's progressive
groups and legislators. Last year, the Maryland Citizens
Health Initiative, a group seeking to help those without
health insurance, proposed a tax on employers that don't
provide health benefits. That idea didn't get far in the
legislative process. But an effort to expand health coverage
to uninsured Marylanders by taxing health maintenance
organizations made more headway, narrowly failing in the
state Senate. "With the failure of that bill on the floor of
the Senate last year and the failure to override the
governor's veto on the living wage bill, there was a sense
in the Senate that they needed to deliver on high-profile
working family bills this year," said Tom Hucker, executive
director of Progressive Maryland, which worked on the
Wal-Mart bill. The timing wasn't ideal. Months before the
start of this year's legislative session, Wal-Mart announced
it would build a new distribution center with 1,000 jobs in
Somerset County - a project the company is rethinking in
light of the legislation.
Andrew A. Green and David Nitkin, "Union uses state in
Wal-Mart fight: Health care bill marks group's first
victory against retailer," Baltimore Sun, April 15,
2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/MarylandWalmart
Soak the rich tax socks it to the liberals
Especially, er, rich, is the fact
that the AMT is biting hardest in the most liberal, high-tax
states. That's because the AMT doesn't allow deductions for
state and local taxes the way the regular code does. So
middle-class taxpayers in New York, California and other
states with high income-tax rates are getting hit sooner
than people in, say, Florida or Wyoming. It is the ultimate
blue-state tax.
"Class-War Revelation," The Wall Street Journal,
April 15, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111353268743207864,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
This helps to explain why
people who normally thrill to higher tax rates are
suddenly up in arms. Liberal newspapers are now
denouncing the AMT as a "tax increase" and blaming the
White House for not doing more to stop it. "The AMT
needs to be fixed," moans Senator Barbara Boxer's
spokesman, in what has to be a tax-reform first. "We
need to address the AMT, which is trickling down to
catch more and more middle-class families in New York,"
says Empire State Senator Chuck Schumer, another Saul on
the road to Tarrytown.
Prying eyes are everywhere
But with an $80 piece of software
intended to track what his son was doing on the Internet,
the 36-year-old Phoenix real estate investor uncovered some
information about what his wife — now his ex-wife — was
doing online as well. Gortarez isn't the only one. Husbands
and wives, moms and dads, even neighbors and friends
increasingly are succumbing to the temptation to snoop,
thanks to a growing array of inexpensive, easily accessible
high-tech sleuthing tools once available only to
professional investigators. Move over, Big Brother. Little
Brother is squeezing in. From software that secretly
monitors computer activity to tiny hidden surveillance
cameras and global positioning system devices, spy tools
that can track a person's location now can be purchased in
retail stores and on the Internet . . .
You can bug people the way spy
agencies used to do 20 years ago — really cheap now," says
Howard Rheingold, author of Smart Mobs: The Next Social
Revolution. "The Orwellian vision was about state-sponsored
surveillance. Now it's not just the state, it's your nosy
neighbor, your ex-spouse and people who want to spam you."
Janet Kornblum, "Prying eyes are everywhere," USA Today,
April 13, 2005 ---
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2005-04-13-spyware_x.htm
Beware of toxic blogs
Toxic blogs are been used to
distribute malware and keyloggers, censorware firm Websense
warns. Websense Security Labs said it has discovered
"hundreds of instances" of blogs involved in the storage and
delivery of harmful code this year. Anti-virus firms
question why Websense has singled out blogs as a particular
security risk but Websense does come up with at least one
concrete example of the trick having been used in anger.
According to Websense, blogs can be attractive vehicles for
hackers for several reasons — blogs offer large amounts of
free storage, they rarely require any identity
authentication to post information, and most blog hosting
facilities do not provide antivirus protection for posted
files. In some cases, the culprits create a blog on a
legitimate host site, post viral code or keylogging software
to the page, and attract traffic to the toxic blog by
sending a link through spam email or instant messaging (IM)
to potential victims. Alternatively the blog can be used as
a storage location from which PCs infected with Trojans
"phone home" to get updated attack code.
John Leyden, "Beware of toxic blogs," The Register, April
14, 2005 ---
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/04/14/toxic_blogs/
I Don't DO Math. Guest commentary by Jay C. Odaffer,
The Irascible Professor, April 14, 2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-14-05.htm
A few days ago, one of my
Environmental Science students came to see me about her
grade. I was multi-tasking in the office, as usual
during my office hours before and after an exam. Several
students were clamoring with questions and personal
emergencies. I told her the maximum number of points
possible so far and then told her the points that she
had earned on each of the half dozen assignments. I
reminded her that a score of ninety percent was an A,
eighty percent was a B and so forth. I had her sit at an
empty desk and turned to help the next person in line.
When everyone else was done,
she was still there, waiting politely.
"Um. I didn't bring my
calculator. Could you add these for me?"
I knew what was coming, but I
couldn't help myself. I handed her a pencil.
"What's this for?"
"To add with."
She then launched into a
sublimely self-confident explanation about why she does
not DO math. She wasn't ashamed or apologetic. In fact
her tone suggested that she believed that I was the one
who was being unreasonable. She informed me that she is
getting A's in all of her major course work so my
expectations are clearly above and beyond what I should
be requiring of "non-science" majors. The thrust of her
argument seemed to be that calculators and spreadsheets
make arithmetic unnecessary and that she will have no
use for anything more advanced in her chosen career.
She is going to be a teacher.
New interdisciplinary doctoral programs
will do math
“We want to
change the professionalization of graduate
students,” said Vera Kutzinski, director of
Vanderbilt’s Center for the Americas, which
will sponsor the new workshop, and the
Martha Rivers Ingram Professor of English.
At Claremont, all Ph.D. students must now
take a “T course” (for “transdisciplinary")
sometime in the first two years of their
program. The courses are team taught around
a theme — currently “poverty, capital and
ethics.” Each course must include students
from a range of disciplines, and they are
required to undertake different types of
research for their requirements. One of the
debut courses is “Citizenship, Development,
and Justice: A Global Perspective,” and it
features professors of philosophy, politics
and education. Patricia Easton, the
philosophy professor and also the dean of
arts and humanities, said that religion
students were taken aback by getting
assignments that were heavily quantitative,
but that’s part of the idea. “All of us have
been asked to look outside our discipline
and our discipline’s tools,” Easton said.
“It’s been uncomfortable at times.”
Scott Jaschik, "Ph.D. Education — Beyond
Disciplines," Inside Higher Ed, April 14,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/14/grad
Students do do religion
Researchers released
data Wednesday
that offers the most complete portrait to
date of new college students’ attitudes
about spirituality and religion, and the
study suggests that freshmen care far more
about spiritual matters than is widely
believed. More than three-quarters of
freshmen say they are looking for meaning in
life, for example, and more than two-thirds
engage in prayer.The statistics come from
surveys completed in the fall by 112,000
students attending 236 four-year colleges
and universities. The study was conducted by
the Higher Education Research Institute of
the University of California at Los Angeles
and is part of a multiyear effort to track
what happens to students’ spirituality while
they are in college.
Scott Jaschik, "God and Freshmen," Inside
Higher Ed, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/14/spirit
Nanotechnology to eradicate hunger and poverty
The experts reckoned that energy
storage, production and conversion would be the top use of
nanotechnology in a decade, including more efficient solar
cells, hydrogen fuel cells and new hydrogen storage. Second
was farming, where nanotech devices could increase soil
fertility and crop production. Tiny devices could, for
instance, be made to release fertilisers at a strictly
controlled rate. Third came water treatment - nano-membranes
and clays could purify or desalinate water more efficiently
than conventional filters and are a fraction of the size.
Singer said the study might give clues to investing in
nanotechnology and contribute to UN goals set in 2000 of
halving poverty and hunger by 2015.
"Tiny devices to eradicate poverty?" Aljazeera, April
13, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/631354E9-8FA5-442A-BD1F-01F0F43988EA.htm
Bob Jensen's thread on ubiquitous computing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ubiquit.htm
How is HIV really transmitted in Africa?
HIV cases in Africa come from
sexual transmission, virtually all heterosexual. So says the
World Health Organization, with other agencies toeing the
line. Massive condom airdrops accompanied by a persuasive
propaganda campaign would practically make the epidemic
vanish overnight. Or would it? A determined renegade group
of three scientists has fought for years – with little
success – to get out the message that no more than a third
of HIV transmission in Africa is from sexual intercourse and
most of that is anal. By ignoring the real vectors, they
say, we’re sacrificing literally millions of people . . .
The chief reason it’s so hard to spread HIV vaginally is
that, as biopsies of vaginal and cervical tissue show, the
virus is unable to penetrate or infect healthy vaginal or
cervical tissue. Various sexually transmitted diseases
facilitate vaginal HIV infection, but even those appear to
increase the risk only slightly. So if vaginal intercourse
can’t explain the awful African epidemic, what can? Surely
it’s not homosexuality, since we’ve been told there is none
in Africa. In fact, the practice has long been widespread.
Michael Fumento, "The African heterosexual AIDS
myth," Town Hall, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/GuestColumns/Fumento20050414.shtml
Hank really didn't give her this gift as a token of
love. It was more like an effort to keep it from lawsuits
and fines.
Maurice R. "Hank" Greenberg gave
his wife the vast majority of his $2.3 billion in shares of
American International Group Inc. in an effort to shield the
fortune from future lawsuits, a person close to his legal
team said. Though this person said the tactic wasn't
intended to protect the fortune from any lawsuits that could
spring from the current accounting scandal at AIG, Mr.
Greenberg wanted to protect the wealth he built up during
nearly four decades running the financial company from
unrelated litigation that might later crop up.
Estate-planning experts have been scratching their heads
over why Mr. Greenberg, 79 years old, would have transferred
the shares to his wife last month, given that there appears
to be no concrete tax advantage to his estate in doing so.
White-collar lawyers noted that, should Mr. Greenberg ever
face fines or civil judgments against him in connection with
the months-long accounting probes into AIG, the transfer
isn't likely to stop government agencies or victorious
plaintiffs from tapping the huge fortune in company stock.
Theo Francis and Ian McDonald, "Greenberg Move May Not
Shield Assets," The Wall Street Journal, April 14,
2005; Page C1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111344514896806737,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Time is running out for rain forests
Those who would defend the
destruction of the rain forests often cite "development" as
an excuse. They argue that the world's rain forests are
situated in poor countries -- Brazil, Indonesia, Congo,
Burma -- and that to place heavy restrictions on logging and
deforestation is to deny millions the opportunity to escape
poverty. The Brazilian government frequently argues that it
must clear areas of forest to build roads and lay power
lines. Other countries defend their right to earn a living
through logging. But this does not stand up to close
scrutiny. Most of the logging that goes on is not done by
government contractors in a sustainable fashion; it is done
by gangsters in the most reckless way imaginable. In
Indonesia, the habitats of endangered species have been
destroyed and local tribes driven out. The driving force
behind the clearances in Brazil is the greed of ranchers,
eager to make a profit out of soybean crops and cattle
grazing. And the government in Burma is not interested in
development. It has exploited the country's rain forests
simply to shore up its brutal grip on power.
"Time is running out for rain forests," SeattlePI, April 14,
2005 ---
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/219978_rainforest14.html
The new in-thing for late night TV
Between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m., the
channel known by day as the Cartoon Network morphs into a
strange world of experimental adult animation populated by
characters like Frylock, a crime-fighting packet of french
fries, and Harvey Birdman, a former superhero trying to make
it as a corporate lawyer. The shows are a massive hit with
nocturnal college kids and channel-surfing insomniacs, and
Adult Swim is consistently the top-rated cable channel in
its time slot among 18- to 34-year-olds.
Jane Spencer, "The Cartoons Nipping At Leno and Letterman:
Animation for Insomniacs, A Dangerous Liaisons Sequel And
Future NBA Stars," The Wall Street Journal, April 14,
2004 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111344078700006656,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Paying by the head count in New Haven
Yale University
announced this
week that it would nearly double, to about
$4.2 million next year, what it pays the
city of New Haven annually in place of local
taxes. What’s perhaps most interesting about
the arrangement, though, is how university
and city officials chose to calculate the
figure: through a formula based on the
number of staff members who work on the
campus and the number of students who live
on it.Many private nonprofit colleges and
their communities have complex and often
contentious relationships, and money is
frequently at the core of the conflict.
Cities and towns want the colleges and other
tax-exempt entities to pay toward fire,
police and other services that benefit the
institutions, and the process by which
nonprofit colleges decide whether to make
payments, and of what size, to their local
cities or towns “in lieu of taxes” has
always seemed a scattershot one.
Northwestern University and its hometown,
Evanston, Ill., for instance, have been
locked in battle for years over the issue.
Doug Ledgerman, "Novel Approach to Town &
Gown," Inside Higher Ed, April 14,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/14/yale
From Community Colleges to the Ivy League
The Jack Kent Cooke Foundation is
already known for a major scholarship program for students
who transfer from two-year institutions. In January, it
quietly announced that it planned to create another $7
million program aimed at increasing the number of
two-year-college students who transfer to top colleges. In
its formal announcement Wednesday, it said the money will be
spent, among other things, on a national conference and five
grants of $1 million each to selective colleges to set up
new transfer programs. “The best community college students
from low-income backgrounds have all the talent and drive
required to succeed at great universities,” said Matthew J.
Quinn, the foundation’s executive director. “This project
will help the most selective colleges and universities do a
better job of recruiting and enrolling an outstanding and
economically diverse group of students.”
Scott Jaschik, "From Community Colleges to the Elites,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/14/transfer
Eye on the eye
Mann, a
University of Toronto
professor who
helped found MIT Media Lab's
Wearable Computing Project,
has made it a
mission to make people more aware of the
surveillance around them -- in the form
of cameras concealed in store smoke
detectors, smoked-glass domes,
illuminated door exit signs and even
stuffed animals sitting on store shelf
displays -- by engaging in what he calls
"equiveillance through sousveillance."
The opposite of surveillance -- French
for watching from above -- sousveillance
refers to watching from below,
essentially from beneath the eye in the
sky. It's the equivalent of keeping an
eye on the eye.
Kim Zetter, "Surveillance Works Both
Ways," Wired News, April 14, 2005
---
http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,67216,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1
I've written about Freakonomics before, but here's a
good illustration: Abortion reduces crime rates
Back in 1999, Mr. Levitt
(actually Dr. Leavitt from the University of Chicago)
was trying to figure out why crime
rates had fallen so dramatically in the previous decade. He
was struck by the fact that crime began falling nationwide
just 18 years after the Supreme Court effectively legalized
abortion. He was struck harder by the fact that in five
states crime began falling three years earlier than it did
everywhere else. These were exactly the five states that had
legalized abortion three years before Roe v. Wade. Did crime
fall because hundreds of thousands of prospective criminals
had been aborted? Once again, the pattern by itself is not
conclusive, but once again Mr. Levitt piles pattern on
pattern until the evidence overwhelms you. The bottom line?
Legalized abortion was the single biggest factor in bringing
the crime wave of the 1980s to a screeching halt. Mr. Levitt
repeatedly reminds us that economics is about what is true,
not what ought to be true. To this reviewer's considerable
delight, he cheerfully violates this principle at the end of
the abortion discussion by daring to address the question of
whether abortion ought to be legal or, more precisely,
whether the effect on crime rates is a sufficient reason to
legalize abortion. He doesn't pretend to settle the matter,
but in just a few pages he constructs exactly the right
framework for thinking about it and then leaves the reader
to draw his own conclusions. Economists, ever wary of
devaluing their currency, tend to be stinting in their
praise. I therefore tried hard to find something in this
book that I could complain about. But I give up. Criticizing
"Freakonomics" would be like criticizing a hot fudge
sundae. I had briefly planned to gripe about the occasional
long and pointless anecdotes, but I changed my mind. Sure,
we get six pages on the Chicago graduate student who barely
escaped with his life after his adviser sent him into the
housing projects with a clipboard to survey residents on how
they feel about being black and poor. Sure, there is no real
point to the story. But a story that good doesn't need a
point.
Steven Landsberg, "When Numbers Solve a Mystery
Meet the economist who figured out that legal abortion was
behind dropping crime rates," Opinion Journal, April
13, 2005 ---
http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=110006550
Jensen Comment: you can read more about Leavitt's great
Freakonomics book at
http://snipurl.com/Freakonomics
I apologize that my recommendation of this book is a repeat
from former Tidbits.
Coldplay Calling
This week, the two met, thanks to
an exclusive deal between the band and Cingular Wireless.
Even though it may be hard for music fans of a certain
vintage to believe that rich-sounding music can be channeled
through the tiny, tinny speaker of a cell phone, the $209
million market -- which has nearly doubled since last year
-- suggests that the mobile masses have few qualms with the
sound quality. When Cingular Wireless launched its new
ringtone service this week with the exclusive release of
"Speed of Sound", the first Coldplay single from its
upcoming album XY, the response from fans was immediate.
"We've been floored," says Mark Nagel, director for
entertainment and downloadable services for Cingular. Fans
can plunk down $2.49 to purchase a 15-second song snippet
that can be used as their phone's ringtone.
Eric Helweg, "Coldplay Calling," MIT's Technology Review,
April 15, 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/wo/wo_041505hellweg.asp?trk=nl
College Access — Comparing Countries
Tuition and aid policies vary so widely
around the world that it has been hard to
compare many countries’ higher education
systems for the access that they provide
students. But a
study released
Thursday uses a variety of measures to do
just that — and finds Sweden has the most
affordable higher education system and the
Netherlands has the most accessible.The
study was prepared by the Educational Policy
Institute. It found data to compare 15
industrialized countries on affordability
(the rankings go to 16 because of separate
analyses of Belgium’s Flemish and French
communities), and 13 on accessibility.The
United States was ranked 13th on
affordability and 4th on accessibility.
Scott Jaschik, "College Access — Comparing
Countries," Inside Higher Ed, April
15, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/15/intl
When Playboy ranked party schools, Chico generally was
high on the list
California State University at
Chico has announced new standards for the Greek system, and
the president said that he will not hesitate to evict houses
that do not abide by the rules. The new rules follow the
hazing death of a student and the involvement of a
fraternity in making a pornographic film. The San Francisco
Chronicle quoted Paul Zingg, the president, telling
students: “To the extent that you are now, you will no
longer be drinking clubs masquerading as fraternities and
sororities.”
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, April 15, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/15/qt
Oh Canada
Canada's secret, according to
management consultancy Accenture, is a willingness to ask
citizens what they want. The firm last week published its
annual survey of e-government in 22 countries in North
America, Europe, Africa and Asia. As in the past four years,
Canada topped the league. (Britain came 10th.) Coming top in
e-government is not just a matter of putting official
procedures on the web. Over the past few years, most
advanced countries have created online channels for public
services such as paying taxes and applying for permits. The
reason the Accenture survey places Canada so far ahead of
Britain — in fact, in a league of its own — is that it has
used the web to re-think how public services are run.
Michael Gross, "A league of its own: Any government wanting
to achieve a high standard of e-readiness should look to
Canada for clues," Guardian, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/online/story/0,3605,1458546,00.html
Who's turning up the heat on Palestinian academics?
As an expatriate Briton now living
in Israel, I find it hard to describe my shock and feeling
of betrayal at the proposed action of the Academic Union of
Teachers to boycott Israeli academics. I was born and
brought up in England, imbibing the British attitude to fair
play. How, I wonder, could that attitude have become so
eroded in the mere 20 years since I left my home in
Leamington Spa to live in Jerusalem? Since I emigrated to
Israel, untold horrors have taken place in many parts of the
world.
Norman W. Cohen, "Who's turning up the heat on Palestinian
academics?" Jerusalem Post, April 17, 2005
Covert Animosity and Open Discrimination Against Women
Prevail in Arab Countries
Writing in Elaph.com on March 7,
2005 Saudi author Wajiha Al-Huweidar explained: "All of the
Arab regimes are U.N. members and have ratified the 1948
Declaration of Human Rights, which clearly establishes
justice and equality in the rights and obligations of all
citizens. Despite this, women in our chauvinist countries
are still considered the property of their relatives. All
Arab countries, without exception, harbor covert animosity
and open discrimination against women. To this day, all
official bodies reject any scientific discussion of a
solution to women's problems – while on the other hand the
men, who benefit from women's oppression, continue to
regurgitate [the mant r a] that 'women are respected' [in
Arab and Muslim societies]… "Arab countries' legislation
patently discriminates against women and clearly denies
their rights, which affronts them as human beings. They are
still treated as though they contaminate purity, and arouse
temptation and immorality. What is astounding is that most
Arabs, at all levels and in every area – whether
governments, institutions, or individuals – still consider
women's issues a religious issue, and thus believe that her
concerns should be dealt with through outdated chauvinist
[religious] interpretations…
"Wajiha Al-Huweidar: "Covert Animosity and Open
Discrimination Against Women Prevail in Arab Countries,"
MDMRI, April 12, 2005 ---
http://memri.org/bin/latestnews.cgi?ID=SD89005
Pistol Packin' Grandma, lay that robber down
"I figured either I was going to
have to pull the trigger or I'd be dead," said Grammer. So
she did. Faking a moment's hesitation, Grammer reached under
the counter for a .38 special and came up firing, her first
shot hitting the man in the chest at point-blank range. The
force knocked him down and jolted the gun from his hand, she
said. As the man staggered for the door of Apple Gate Food
Store at Wesconnett Boulevard and 105th Street, she fired
two more rounds, police said. The suspect left a trail of
blood before running into nearby woods, authorities said . .
. A man fitting the robber's description went to the Orange
Park Medical Center a short time after the robbery attempt
as a police helicopter and canine units scoured the
neighborhood for the robber. The man told doctors he shot
himself. He was taken by helicopter to Shands Jacksonville,
according to police, who did not identify the man but
confirmed he was in custody.
"Westside store clerk shoots would-be robbery
suspect: The 64-year-old mother of 10 reacted quickly to
save her own life while working at Apple Gate Food Store,"
The Florida-Times Union, April 15, 2005 ---
http://jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/041505/met_18486472.shtml
War criminals find sanctuary in Sweden
War criminals and human rights
violators from Afghanistan, Africa, the Middle East and the
Balkans find refuge in Sweden, where they are protected from
repatriation and never prosecuted, officials and activists
say
"Activists: Sweden refuge for war criminals," Aljazeera,
April 15, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/4C3311B8-7F11-48C5-9CD2-DFDECA17FF12.htm
Music:
Lookin' Out My Back Door: Turn speakers up! ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/warning.htm
They can cut all
the flowers, but they'll never stop the Spring.
Pablo Neruda
Farewell to Robert Creeley, Poet, 1926-2005
Just days before he died, he gave
his final reading - in Charlottesville, Virginia - breathing
from what he called "portable wee canisters of oxygen about
the size of champagne bottles". In between the poems Creeley
said very simple things that rang true: "There has been so
much war and pain during the last century. We need to learn
how to be kind; kindness is what makes us human." Creeley
lived in Providence, Rhode Island, and was a distinguished
professor of English at Brown University. The director of
Brown's arts program, Peter Gale Nelson, said of him: "Rare
enough to be a great poet, even rarer to be a great person,
as Robert was. He was a vibrant presence."
"The secret magician of American letters," Sydney Morning
Herald, April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/15/1113509925201.html
Middlebury College offering graduate degrees --- in
California
Middlebury College has always been
known for its undergraduate programs in the liberal arts,
especially in languages. The college has become increasingly
popular with applicants in recent years, but officials have
struggled to figure out whether and how to expand its small
graduate program. The college may have an unusual solution:
taking over a graduate school. The Monterey Institute of
International Studies, a California graduate school with a
strong academic reputation but struggling finances,
approached Middlebury about a possible deal, and the two
institutions are in serious discussions about an
acquisition. For Middlebury, assuming control of the
institute could make it an immediate player in graduate
education, expand its visibility on the West coast, and help
build its connections to Asia (a strength of Monterey by
virtue of its academic priorities and its Pacific location).
Scott Jaschik, "Cross Country Merger," Inside Higher Ed,
April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/21/mid
Coke cooked the books
Richard Wessel, District
Administrator of the Commission's Atlanta District Office,
stated, "MD&A requires companies to provide investors with
the truth behind the numbers. Coca-Cola misled investors by
failing to disclose end of period practices that impacted
the company's likely future operating results." Katherine
Addleman, Associate Director of Enforcement for the
Commission's Atlanta District Office, stated, "In addition,
Coca-Cola made misstatements in a January 2000 Form 8-K
concerning a subsequent inventory reduction and in doing so
continued to conceal the impact of prior end of period
practices and further mislead investors." In its order, the
Commission found that, at or near the end of each reporting
period between 1997 and 1999, Coca-Cola implemented an
undisclosed "channel stuffing" practice in Japan known as
"gallon pushing" for the purpose of pulling sales forward
into a current period. To accomplish gallon pushing's
purpose, Japanese bottlers were offered extended credit
terms to induce them to purchase quantities of beverage
concentrate the bottlers otherwise would not have purchased
until a following period. As Coca-Cola typically sells
gallons of concentrate to its bottlers corresponding to its
bottlers' sales of finished products to retailers, typically
bottlers' concentrate inventory levels increase
approximately in proportion to their sales of finished
products to retailers.
Andrew Priest, "THE
COCA-COLA COMPANY SETTLES ANTIFRAUD AND PERIODIC REPORTING
CHARGES RELATING TO ITS FAILURE TO DISCLOSE JAPANESE GALLON
PUSHING," AccountingEducation.com, April 21,
2005 ---
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news6094.html
Bob Jensen's threads on previous channel stuffing revenue
recognition frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#ChannelStuffing
Encarta lets everyone be an editor, but not as
instantaneously as Wikipedia
Microsoft Corp.'s Encarta
encyclopedia is testing a system that lets everyone be an
editor -- in theory at least. Readers can suggest edits or
additions to entries, although the changes are vetted by
editors before they reach the page. Encarta is not requiring
such novice editors to identify themselves, said Gary Alt,
Encarta's editorial director. But it is asking them to
reveal the source of their information if possible, and the
editorial staff will check for both factual errors and
evidence of bias. This is in contrast to the online
encyclopedia Wikipedia, which lets anyone instantaneously
make changes, even delete entries, regardless of whether
that person has any expertise in the subject. Encarta has
added research editors and fact checkers to handle the
volume of edits it expects to receive when the system goes
live, perhaps as early as this week. But Alt said the added
cost is balanced by the advantage of having a seemingly
endless pool of people who may know more about a subject
than hired editors ever would -- and will offer their expert
advice for free.
"Encarta lets everyone be an editor," CNN, April 19,
2005 ---
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/internet/04/18/encarta.wiki.ap/index.html
This tidbit was forwarded by Debbie Bowling.
This is my favorite mutual fund
Vanguard Group plans to start
charging many of its customers lower fees, in a move likely
to further rev up the mutual-fund price wars.
Tom Lauricella, The Wall Street Journal, April 21, 2005;
Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111404195425112680,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Jensen Comment: Vanguard has always been very fair
regarding fees and fund choices to suit your investment
goals. Vanguard stayed clean and honest before and after
the recent scandals in so very many other mutual funds that
have been rotten to the core ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
Tones at the top write the music
Many people tend to overlook strong business ethics. Unless
management at the top shows a clear path of ethical business
practices, the people below cannot be expected to follow.
Without ethics, business has no meaning.
Shreinik Lalbhai, in a convocation address to the eighth
Nirma Institute of Management Studies in India, on the
subject of ethics in business ---
http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-4/Issue-4/bschoolquotes.asp
Personally I wouldn't know what to do with the
leisure.
Relativist income and status: Is this the real secret to
happiness?
Consider this experiment where
students at Harvard were asked to choose between living in
two imaginary worlds. In World One, you get $50,000 a year
while other people average $25,000. In World Two, you get
$100,000 a year, while others average $250,000. The majority
of respondents preferred the first world. They were happy to
be poorer in absolute terms, provided their RELATIVE
position improved. All this suggests that a major motivation
for people in working so hard is to gain higher status
directly from their position in their organisation or from
the amount of money they earn and the homes, cars and other
status symbols they are able to buy with that money.
"The real secret to happiness: higher taxes," The Age,
April 14, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/statusApril15
With so many businesspeople,
economists and politicians banging away, you would have
to be pretty slow not to have got the message: what our
economy desperately needs is a lowering of income tax
rates, particularly the punishing top rate of 48.5 per
cent.
The high tax rates we face are
discouraging people from working as hard as they could.
We need more incentive to try harder - to earn more,
produce more and consume more.
But I've just been reading a
new book - by an economics professor, no less - that
argues the exact reverse: we need to keep tax rates high
to discourage us from working so hard and, in the
process, neglecting more important aspects of life,
including leisure.
The prof is Richard Layard -
Lord Layard, to you - of the London School of Economics.
His book is Happiness: Lessons from a New Science,
published in Britain by Allen Lane.
Why on earth could so many of
us - particularly those on the top tax rate - be working
too hard and neglecting our leisure? At base, because
our evolutionary make-up makes us highly rivalrous
towards other people, to be always comparing ourselves
with others and seeking higher status.
Layard quotes other
researchers' studies of vervet monkeys. The researchers
manipulated the status of a male monkey by moving him
from one group of monkeys to another. In each situation
they measured the monkey's level of serotonin, a
neuro-transmitter connected with feeling good. "The
finding was striking," Layard says, "the higher the
monkey's position in the hierarchy, the better the
monkey feels.
"When a monkey beats off his
rivals, he not only gets more mates and more bananas, he
also gets a direct reward: being top makes him feel
great. This is a powerful motivator."
Social standing has a big
effect on physical health. When monkeys are put in
different groups so that their rank changes, their
coronary arteries clog up more slowly the higher their
rank.
Continued in the article
Americans will still spend more on taxes than they
spend on food, clothing and medical care combined
As many Americans rush to meet
today's deadline to pay their taxes, the Tax Foundation
reports that the average taxpayer will have to work two days
longer than last year to support the government. Tax Freedom
Day -- when the average American has finished earning enough
to pay off his or her state and federal obligations -- will
fall on April 17. That comes to 70 days each of us will
spend working for Uncle Sam this year, and another 37 days
working to support state and local government. "Despite all
the tax cuts that the federal government has passed
recently, Americans will still spend more on taxes than they
spend on food, clothing and medical care combined," says the
Tax Foundation's Scott Hodge, who notes that as economic
growth pushes people into higher tax brackets, tax
collections grow faster than incomes.
John Fund, The Opinion Journal, April 15, 2005
Do Fundamentals or Emotions Drive the Stock Market?
"Behavioral-finance theory holds that markets might fail to
reflect economic fundamentals under three conditions.." The
three conditions are 1. Irrational Behavior 2 Systematic
patterns of behavior and 3. Limits to Arbitrage." "Academics
are still debating whether irrational investors alone can be
blamed for the long-term-reversal and short-term-momentum
patterns in returns. Some believe that long-term reversals
result merely from incorrect measurements of a stock's risk
premium, because investors ignore the risks associated with
a company's size and market-to-capital ratio. (Eugene F.
Fama and Kenneth R. French, "Multifactor Explanations of
Asset Pricing Anomalies," Journal of Finance, 1996, Volume
51, Number 1, pp. 55�84.) These statistics could be a proxy
for liquidity and distress risk." There is more and I HIGHLY
recommend you take a look! It is EXCELLENT! (BTW this was
originally from McKinsey Quarterly.) I wholeheartedly agree
with the article and am comforted by how close this
corresponds to what we do in class! :)
Quoted from Jim Mahar's blog on April 14, 2005. He's
referring to "Do Fundamentals or Emotions Drive the Stock
Market?" by McKinsey & Co. CFO.com ---
http://www.cfo.com/article.cfm/3839631/c_0?f=financeprofessor.com
The article itself appeared in The McKinsey Quarterly, April
13, 2005.
Talking yourself out of depression
Robert DeRubeis of the University
of Pennsylvania and his colleagues beg to differ, however.
They have conducted the largest clinical trial ever designed
to compare talk therapy with chemical antidepressants. The
result, just published in Archives of General Psychiatry, is
that talking works as well as pills do. Indeed, it works
better, if you take into account the lower relapse rate.
The study looked at a relatively modern type of talk
therapy, known as cognitive therapy, which tries to teach
people how to change harmful thoughts and beliefs. Patients
learn to recognise unrealistically negative thoughts when
they occur, and are told how to replace them with more
positive ones. It may sound too simplistic to work, but
other studies have shown it can be used to treat anxiety,
obsessive-compulsive disorder and eating disorders. Dr
DeRubeis wondered just how effective it really was for
depression.
"Talk is cheap," The Economist, April 14, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3860433
"Then I would have to be sorry for dear God. The
theory is correct." Einstein
It took him until 1915 to complete
his general theory of relativity. One of his students in
philosophy and physics in Berlin at the time was a young
woman, Ilse Rosenthal-Schneider, who retained a lifelong
friendship with the famous scientist, even after she had
fled to Sydney in the 1930s. They often took the same tram
to university. "I had ample time to pester him with my
questions," she told this reporter in 1983, at the age of
91. Einstein used to tease her, saying philosophical debates
were like writing in honey. "It looks wonderful at first
sight. But when you look again it is gone. Only the smear is
left." One of Rosenthal-Schneider's fondest memories was
Einstein handing her a cable during a discussion. It was
news that Sir Arthur Eddington's observations of a solar
eclipse had confirmed Einstein's general theory of
relativity. She asked the scientist what he would have done
if the results had not matched his ideas. "Then I would have
to be sorry for dear God. The theory is correct," he told
her. Eddington's team made their observations from Brazil
and the island of Principe in 1919. While the results turned
Einstein into a household name, not all scientists were
convinced by their accuracy. "The data analysis was very
dodgy," says Jamieson. A total solar eclipse in Australia in
1922 gave researchers a second opportunity to test whether
reality matched theory and whether light that passed near a
massive body such as the sun would be bent by the
gravitational force, as Einstein had predicted. American
astronomers from the Lick Observatory in California were
reportedly treated like celebrities on their mission near
Broome, which confirmed Einstein was right. The force of
gravity is much stronger around pulsars - spinning,
city-sized neutron stars weighing more than the sun - than
around normal stars. "So they provide a much more stringent
test of Einstein's theory," says Manchester. He is part of a
team that last year identified a unique pair of pulsars
which are orbiting each other. It has proved to be "a
magnificent laboratory" to test the theory, and his team
also found Einstein got it right. "General relativity is
really very accurate."
"My brilliant idea," Sydney Morning Herald, April 16,
2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/15/1113509926579.html
The blue tongue scare in Spain
Madrid: Some Spaniards may soon
have to prepare for the unthinkable: a summer without
bullfighting. Instead of travelling to the ring, many of
Spain's mighty bulls are being confined to the ranch under a
quarantine aimed at halting the spread of a disease known as
bluetongue. The illness rarely harms cattle, but can
devastate sheep, the backbone of Spain's €7 billion ($11.6
billion) livestock industry, causing fevers and internal
bleeding. The Government suspects ranches that produce
fighting bulls are harbouring the infection, and has ordered
60 per cent of them quarantined. "The current measures would
create the gravest crisis we have ever known," said Enrique
Garza Grau, secretary-general of the National Association of
Organisers of Bullfighting Spectacles. "If they are not
modified, we wouldn't be able to carry out even 50 per cent
of the events that are scheduled." Supporters say
bullfighting is the essence of Spanish culture, so a threat
is taken seriously.
"Sheep scare takes fight out of bulls," Sydney Morning
Herald, April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/15/1113509927404.html
Ignorance is not bliss: 10 million children in the
Arab world are out of school
Half of the women in the Arab world
are illiterate and more than 10 million children in the
region do not go to school, a report has revealed. The
report on the status of children and women, produced by the
Arab League and the UN Children's Fund (Unicef), said many
Arab countries have made progress on child rights and
protection, but that more still needs to be done. "More than
10 million children in the Arab world are out of school,
most of them in Egypt, Iraq, Morocco and Sudan," said the
report, although it gave no figures for the total number of
school-age children in the region.
"Report: Half of Arab women illiterate," Aljazeera,
April 12, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/30E03A5E-9BA1-4BE4-B718-BE08BF8A05D8.htm
In Pursuit of Arab Reform ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/967715B8-276C-4708-AC08-7FD102E13BA7.htm
Give me your stuffed shirts yearning to breathe rich:
Total CEO pay was up smartly, to an average $9.6 million
Total CEO pay was up smartly, to an
average $9.6 million -- a 15% increase from $8.3 million in
2003. But that average was skewed by the outsize pay package
of our most highly compensated CEO, Yahoo! Inc.'s (YHOO )
Terry Semel, who received a package worth $120 million made
up almost entirely of options. Take him out of the mix and
the average raise was 11.3%, not far off the rise in
shareholder gains." An important change in this year's
scoreboard is that the options are valued using the Black
Scholes formula rather than merely looking at exercise
gains. This will make "pay anomalies are now easier to
detect, thanks to a new methodology that BusinessWeek began
using this year. Instead of counting the windfalls from
option exercises as part of the annual pay package, as we
have in the past, we're counting the value of annual option
grants. The values are calculated using the Black-Scholes
formula...."
Quoted from Jim Mahar's blog on April 14, 2005. He's
referring to "2005 Executive Compensation Scoreboard The
2005 Business Week Executive Compensation "scoreboard,"
Business Week ---
http://bwnt.businessweek.com/exec_comp/2005/index.asp
If you have this magazine in the attic, it might be
worth $10,000
From the Washingon Post Tech News on
April 15
In 1965, a technology trade
magazine quoted Intel Corp. co-founder Gordon Moore as
saying that computer processing power would double each
year, a theory widely embraced as Moore's law and one that
still holds true to this day. Trouble is, Intel never saved
a copy of the magazine and now is offering $10,000 for a
mint condition copy. Which magazine are they looking for?
A.
Popular Mechanics
B.
Computing Times
C.
Electronics Magazine
D.
PC World
Johnson's Dictionary
Two hundred fifty years ago, on April 15, 1755, Samuel
Johnson published the first edition of his Dictionary of the
English Language, compiled and written almost wholly by
himself. It appeared in London in two folio volumes. Like
most dictionaries, there is a rigorous serenity in the look
of its pages. The language has been laid out in alphabetical
order. The etymologies and definitions bristle with italics
and abbreviations. The quotations that exemplify the
meanings of the words present a bottomless fund of good
sense and literary beauty. It's tempting to think of a
lexicographer in terms of the dictionary he produces, and
Johnson's is certainly one of the great philological
accomplishments of any literary era. But it's just as
interesting to think of what the dictionary does to the man.
Johnson says, quite simply, "I applied myself to the perusal
of our writers." But reading "our writers" to find the
materials for a dictionary is unlike any other kind of
reading I can imagine. It would atomize every text, forsake
the general sense of a passage for the particular meaning of
individual words. It would be like hiking through quicksand,
around the world. Johnson lived in turmoil, and the sense of
vigor he so often projected was, if nothing else, a way of
keeping order in a world that threatened to disintegrate
into disorder every day. And what was the disorder of London
to the chaos of the language? "Sounds," he wrote, "are too
volatile and subtile (interesting that the NYT
would spell subtle wrong in an article about a dictionary)
for legal restraints; to enchain syllables, and to lash the
wind, are equally the undertakings of pride." Johnson
published his dictionary not as the conqueror of the
language but as the person who knew best how unconquerable
it really is.
Verlyn Klinkenborg, "Johnson's Dictionary," The New York
Times, April 17, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/17/opinion/17sun3.html?th&emc=th&oref=login
No sex please, I'm not into it
In the first study of asexuality
ever published, Anthony Bogaert of Brock University in
Canada last year analysed the responses of 18,000 people in
Britain from a 1994 survey on sexual attraction. He found a
"surprisingly high" number - 1 per cent - agreed with the
statement "I have never felt sexually attracted to anyone at
all". His results were published last year in The Journal of
Sex Research and reported in New Scientist magazine. While
homosexual behaviour has been observed in more than 450
species of animals, sheep have provided the best evidence so
far for asexuality in the animal kingdom. Three different
American teams in the 1990s found that about 10 per cent of
rams showed no interest in ewes. Up to 7 per cent tried to
mount or sexually interact with other rams. This left 3 per
cent of rams that were sexually inactive.
"No sex please, I'm not into it," Sydney Morning Herald,
April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/15/1113509924438.html
The article itself describes the "pattern"
Ultimately, being coupled is simply
a state of mind, just as being single is. So your reaction,
when your status shifts from one state to the other, will
depend on whether it was your decision, your partner's or
something that happened while you were busy making other
plans; and what it all meant to you in the first place.
Whatever the circumstances, when it does go pear-shaped, it
takes a while to morph back from "we" to "I" but the loss
follows this pattern.
Megan Gressor, "Back to square one," Sydney Morning
Herald, April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/13/1113251685928.html
That speculation is incorrect
The memo went out to University of Texas System presidents
last month. The Board of Regents had updated its rules on
faculty rights and responsibilities, and wanted to make sure
that professors knew about the new code . . . Under a
section called “Freedom in the Classroom,” the policy reads:
“Faculty members are entitled to freedom in the classroom in
discussing his or her subject, but are expected not to
introduce into their teaching controversial matter that has
no relation to his or her subject.” As that language spread
across the Internet, some professors suggested that there
was a new crackdown in the works on what goes on in faculty
classrooms, apparently to pre-empt David Horowitz-style
“Academic Bill of Rights” legislation to regulate faculty
conduct. That speculation is incorrect.
Scott Jaschik, "Layers of Meaning," Inside
Higher Ed, April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/21/texas
States yearn to collect online sales taxes
Online purchases from sites like
Amazon.com and eBay may seem to arrive tax-free. Strictly
speaking, however, purchasers are required to pay their own
state's sales tax rate--the concept is called a "use
tax"--and then voluntarily report the amount owed at tax
time. Few do. That situation worries state tax agencies,
which have long complained about individuals not
volunteering how much use tax they owe from mail-order
sales. The ballooning popularity of online purchases is
making a bad situation worse, state officials believe. (All
states with sales taxes have use taxes.) California
residents, for instance, enjoy a 7.25 percent sales and use
tax. State law is strict: If Californians travel to a state
with a 5 percent tax and shop there, the law requires them
to cough up the 2.25 percent difference when they return.
Online purchases are taxed as well. But compliance is spotty
at best. California's Board of Equalization estimates the
state lost $1.34 billion in 2003 because residents aren't
paying use taxes--$208 million of that due to online
purchases. "We are looking at ways to help solve the tax gap
in California," Anita Gore, a Board of Equalization
spokeswoman, said Thursday. "We're doing the background and
research necessary to bring in more of this money."
Declan McCullagh, "States yearn to collect online sales
taxes," ZDNet, April 15, 2005 ---
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-5672198.html
Looking for love in all the wrong places
He says his job as a Moscow gumshoe
is right out of the movies. His name is Vladimir, an
undercover detective hunting down Russian women who bill
themselves online as brides. As CBS News Correspondent
Thalia Assuras reports, their prey is American men. "They
suck out $3,000 to $5,000, then simply disappear," he says.
"It's become almost like an industry," says Russian
detective Elena Garrett. Garrett is Vladimir's boss back
here in the United States. A Russian bride herself, she now
helps clients find out if their online love is real or an
Internet phantom. "He gives us her name, age and everything,
and we come back in three days and we say, 'There is no such
girl,'" says Garret. "Such girl does not exist."
"Beware Russian Web-Order Brides," CBS News, April
16, 2005 ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/04/14/eveningnews/main688311.shtml
French farmers may become Europe's "black sheep."
Mr Chirac fired some shots at his
opponents, warning his audience about the consequences of
voting No and conjuring up some fears of his own. Without a
strong Europe, he said, France would be vulnerable to the
“ultra-liberal, Anglo-Saxon Atlanticist” currents in the
world and the rising powers of China, India and South
America. In particular, he cautioned France's farmers, who
are opposed to the constitutional treaty, that their
lucrative subsidies from Brussels could end if they rejected
the treaty and became Europe's “black sheep”.
John Thornhill, "Chirac shoots from hip for Yes vote,"
Financial Times, April 15, 2005 ---
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/67c799b4-adea-11d9-9c30-00000e2511c8.html
First clone of champion racehorse revealed
The first ever clone of a champion
racehorse was unveiled on Thursday at a press conference in
Italy. The foal was cloned from a skin cell of Pieraz, a
multiple world champion in equine endurance races of up to
50 kilometres. Unlike conventional horseracing, which bans
the use of non-natural methods of breeding, including
cloning, endurance racing is among the half dozen or so
equine sports which would allow cloned competitors. Others
include dressage, showjumping, three-day-eventing, polo and
carriage horse racing. It is the first time an elite
racehorse has been cloned, and comes two years after the
appearance of Prometea, the first and only other cloned
horse. “Prometea was just a scientific experiment and,
scientifically, there’s not much new about the new clone,”
says Cesare Galli, who produced both horses at the
University of Bologna in Cremona, Italy. “But from an
industry viewpoint, the new horse is the real thing.”
Andy Coghlan, "First clone of champion racehorse revealed,"
New Scientist, April 14, ---
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn7265
His house is now a home
The owner of a brothel in a small
town in southern Poland is closing down his business out of
respect for Pope John Paul II who died on April 2, the
Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper reported yesterday. "I'm closing
down my business with the girls; I'm doing it for the one at
the top, for John Paul II," the paper quoted Jozej Galica as
saying. "Money is not everything. Something cracked inside
me. I lost my way in life," he said. Mr Galica said he would
from now on take communion and confess to his Poronin parish
priest, Franiszek Juchas, who confirmed that the businessman
had assured him he would shut up shop.
"Brothel owner sees the light," Sydney Morning Herald, April
17, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/16/1113509968291.html
Terrible time in history that gave Australians Anzac
Day
Australia fed 331,781 young men
into the World War I mincer of France, Belgium, Gallipoli
and the Middle East. Almost 60,000 never came home. Of those
who did, 213,000 returned wounded, either in body or mind.
Another 85,000 Australians enlisted but did not serve
overseas. In a nation of just 4 million, 416,809 of its men
- all volunteers - were in uniform at some time during the
years 1914-18. Only three are still alive. Two are
Victorians. They are both 105. The other is a West
Australian. He is 106. Just the three of them. They are all
that is left of that terrible time in history that gave us
Anzac Day.
"Shameful history of a desecration," Sydney Morning
Herald, April 16, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/15/1113509924777.html
Investor beware of your broker even after the new laws
and regulations
The outrageous rip-off sends a
clear signal to investors that while many firms on Wall
Street have cleaned up their acts, smaller, neighborhood
brokerages can still be a danger. Mitchell was so bold that
he made more than 2,400 stock deals in one nine-month
stretch and purchased more than $196 million of securities,
the papers said. In addition to illegally draining $10
million from his client's account, he ran up a $7 million
margin balance, according to the NASD papers. "This is one
of the most brazen, egregious frauds I have ever seen," said
Jacob H. Zamansky, the lawyer who brought the charges on
behalf of his clients, Boris and Igor Minakhi, brothers who
are the trustees for their family's fortune.
Richard Wilner, "QUEENS BROKER IN KING-SIZED SCAM ," New
York Post, April 17, 2005 ---
http://www.nypost.com/business/42773.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on "Rotten to the Core" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Congratulations Jim: Best of luck on your tough new
assignment
The University of Washington has named Jim Jiambalvo, a
professor of accounting, dean of the university’s business
school, pending approval by the school’s regents. Jiambalvo,
who has been with the business school since 1977, is
expected to start his new job May 1, 2005. In announcing
Jiambalvo’s nomination for the top job, university officials
said that one of his key goals will be raising money for the
creation and construction of a new business school complex.
"Accounting Professor Named Dean of Business School,"
AccounitngWeb, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100771
Flap in Cincinnati
Racist fliers
posted at the University of Cincinnati set
off multiple controversies this week — over
the fliers themselves (which said “Don’t
have sex with blacks — avoid AIDS") and an
article in the student newspaper that was
illustrated by the fliers, according to an
article in
The Cincinnati Enquirer.
Inside Higher Ed, April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/21/qt
Flap in Georgia
The University of Georgia’s messy, on-again, off-again
battle with its own foundation is on again. The Associated
Press reports that the Board of Regents told the university
to sever ties to the foundation. The two entities have been
fighting over athletics programs, control of the university
name and management issues.
"Flap in Georgia," Inside Higher Ed, April 21, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/21/qt
Are you interested in four of our twelve grandchildren?
Cindy is David's wife and the mother of four of our
grandchildren. Her journal about raising four children near
Yuba City, California ---
http://journals.aol.com/cb96db/Summeradventures/
Music: When
Children Cry (Turn up the speakers) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/children.htm
NIH's
Mental Health's Medline Plus ---
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mentalhealth.html
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and Policy Statistics
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How
many claims are you allowed before your homeowners' policy
is dropped or your rates increased? Better ask your agent!
State tries to combat the cancellation
of insurance policies. Dan and Christy Clancy were visiting
Palm Springs when the theft happened. A hotel valet had left
their car door unlocked, and a thief took $1,436 worth of
entertainment equipment. But worse was yet to come. After
the Clancys filed a claim with Allstate Insurance, they were
told that because it was their second claim in five years –
they had filed a claim for $1,645 for wind and hail damage
to their roof in 2001 – their homeowners policy would not be
renewed.
"Two paid losses in the most
recent five years are considered unacceptable frequency,"
Allstate told them. When they protested, Allstate said it
could provide them with a more restrictive policy for $1,800
a year – twice as much as they had been paying . . . Each
year, insurers in California cancel or refuse to renew
42,500 homeowners' insurance policies, representing about 1
in every 20 claims filed, according to industry statistics.
Dean Calbreath,
"State tries to
combat the cancellation of insurance policies," The San
Diego Union Tribune, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050422/news_1b22insure.html
Web
traffic: Yahoo still leads the pack
Sports sites comprised
half of the top 10 gaining properties in March, with NCAA
sites posting a 473 percent gain from February,
Sportsline.com, 82 percent; and ESPN, 34 percent. Among the
top 50 sites in traffic, Gannett's 13 percent increase in
traffic moved it up six spots to 26, and ESPN, which also
was helped by the start of Major League Baseball, attracted
4.2 million more visitors in March than in February to move
up 18 spots to 33. The top five properties in traffic for
the month, in order,
were Yahoo, Time Warner Network, MSN-Microsoft, Google and
EBay.
Antone Gonsalves, "News, Religion, Sports Drove Web Traffic
In March," Internet Week, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.internetweek.com/allStories/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=161501290
Jensen Comment: I think Yahoo's popular finance and
investing site accounts for a lot of the difference between
Yahoo and Google traffic, but that is just a wild guess on
my part. Click on "Finance" at
http://www.yahoo.com/
Enron documentary will be available soon
For the preview screening in
Houston last week of the documentary " Enron: The Smartest
Guys in the Room," two indicted executives from the company,
Kenneth L. Lay and Jeffrey K. Skilling, were not in the room
- even though their multimillion-dollar homes were just a
few blocks from the theater. "We invited them, but we didn't
hear back," Alex Gibney, the documentary's director, said
with a straight face. Hundreds of former Enron employees,
however, did attend the screening. Many groaned and shook
their heads at archival clips in which top-level management
appeared arrogant, dishonest and greedy. "Try 'em and fry
'em," said Michael Ratner, who was a manager in Enron's
pipeline division and now works for an investment bank. But
in the same breath, he said wistfully: "It was a great place
to work. You could do anything if you proved that you could
make money."
Kate Murphy, "Mr. Skilling, Come On Over," The New York
Times, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/business/yourmoney/24suits.html
Bob
Jensen's threads on the Enron/Andersen scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
Sort of
makes you wonder about library hard copy in general: A
medical advantage of reading online
A Fredericton hospital is being
criticized for removing all Bibles from its patients'
bedside tables in a quest to control infections. "We have
disinfection processes to disinfect other surfaces, but we
don't have anything to disinfect books," said Jane Stafford,
a spokeswoman for the River Valley Health Authority, which
operates the Dr. Everett Chalmers Regional Hospital. "The
influenza virus, when you cough or sneeze, can live on hard
surfaces for 48 hours." Stafford said the Fredericton
hospital isn't the first in Canada to take away the Bible in
the interest of good hygiene. Many hospitals in western
Canada...
"Bedside Bibles banned from N.B. hospital," CBC News,
April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2005/04/22/hospital-bibles050422.html
How to
lie about student/faculty ratios
To illustrate the
meaninglessness of the ratio, imagine two universities with
exactly the same number of students, say 5,000, and the same
number of faculty, say 500. Both institutions would report a
student/faculty ratio of 10, and following common wisdom, we
might imagine that both have the same teaching environment.
The data do not show however, what the faculty do with their
time. Imagine that the first university has faculty of high
prestige by virtue of their research accomplishments, and
that these faculty spend half of their time in the classroom
and half in research activities, a pattern typical of
research institutions. Imagine, too, that the second
university in our example has faculty less active in
research but fully committed to the teaching mission of
their college. Where the research-proficient faculty at our
first institution spend only half their time in class, the
teaching faculty in the second institution spend all of
their time in the classroom. Correcting the numbers to
reflect the real commitment of faculty to teaching would
give an actual student to teaching-faculty ratio of 20 to 1
for the research institution and 10 to 1 for the teaching
college. The official reported ratio is wildly misleading at
best.
John V. Lombardi, "Fuzzy Numbers," Inside Higher Ed,
April 15, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/15/lombardi
Grumpy Old Men: How to lie in
psychological "research"
"Poisson d'Avril," by
John Brignell,
Number Watch,
April 2005 ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/2005
April.htm
We are given
some details of the “research”. 153
people were interviewed. They were
divided into two sexes, four age
ranges and four anecdotal levels of
rage; so the 153 people were put
into 32 boxes, which on average is
fewer than five per box. Using the
Poisson
approximation, the random variation
on this number would be about 50%.
Furthermore, the ratio of two such
numbers would have a variation of
about 100%. However, that is where
they have got us, because no
numerical results are presented.
Never mind, at least we have the
comfort of familiarity:
Miss Barnett told the conference in
Manchester yesterday that more
research was needed into why men
calm down while women “remain
simmering” through the ages.
It is quite
extraordinary what passes for
science these days, especially
during the popularising festivals,
while the British Psychological
Society has always been good for a
laugh. The Associations for
Advancement of Science (British and
American versions) give house room
to the most bizarre unscientific
theories, such as Lysenkoist
explanations for the development of
man’s great brain (apparently it is
now caused by eating meat and not
tubers as reported in Sorry,
wrong number!).
The stories
above were both published on
April Fool’s
Day.
The genuine traditional hoax took
the form of a full page
advertisement from BMW, claiming to
have eliminated the steering wheel.
Trouble is, the hoax is more
believable than the “science”
Continued in
article
The ACLU now wants to strike down
the Prince Case if it will be used to
allow a Bible club
In Prince v.
Jacoby, ADF argues, the Ninth Circuit
held that denying official sponsorship
of a club violates the Equal Access Act.
ADF points out that in 2003, shortly
after Prince v. Jacoby was decided, the
ACLU sent an information letter to
school officials in Washington state
explaining the case "makes it clear that
student clubs promoting tolerance for
gay students are entitled to the same
resources as other clubs." But now, the
ACLU has filed a friend-of-the-court
brief in the Truth case that takes the
opposite position. The ACLU now wants to
strike down the Prince case if it will
be used to allow a Bible club on campus,
the ADF's Tim Chandler told
WorldNetDaily.
"ACLU caught red-handed?"
WorldNetDaily, April 23, 2005 ---
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=43950
The Bodleian Library at the
University of Oxford in England is the
only place you are likely to find an
Ethernet port that looks like a book.
The
Bodleian Library at the University of
Oxford in England is the only place you
are likely to find an Ethernet port that
looks like a book. Built into the
ancient bookcases dominating the oldest
wing of the 402-year-old library, the
brown plastic ports share shelf space
with handwritten catalogues of the
university’s medieval manuscripts and
other materials. Some of the volumes are
still chained to the shelves, a
17th-century innovation designed to
discourage borrowing. But thanks to the
Ethernet ports and the university’s
effort to digitize irreplaceable books
like the catalogues—which often contain
the only clue to locating an obscure
book or manuscript elsewhere in the vast
library—users of the Bodleian don’t even
need to take the books off the shelves.
They can simply plug in their laptops,
connect to the Internet, and view the
pertinent pages online. In fact, anyone
with a Web browser can read the
catalogues, a privilege once restricted
to those fortunate enough to be teaching
or studying at Oxford.
Wade Roush, "The Infinite Library,"
MIT's Technology Magazine, May
2008 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/issue/feature_library.asp
Vive les Blogs!
Spurred by a
culture of popular expression and debate
that can be traced back to France's
17th-century salons, the French are
embracing weblogs with a greater zeal
than anyone on the European continent.
Take a recent Paris
warehouse party,
which hooked up 200 local bloggers in
person for the first time, an
illustration of the European web's
best-kept secret -- when it comes to
blogs, the French can't get enough.
Robert Andrews, "Vive les Blogs!"
Wired News, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,67273,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_5
April 22, 2005
letter from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
I would like
some advice on what news aggregator to use for RSS
feeds. I read the BusinessWeek Online article on blogs
this morning, and it piqued my interest
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_18/b3931001_mz001.htm?c=bwinsiderapr22&n=link1&t=email
The
BusinessWeek Online blog,
http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/blogspotting/
gave a link to various blog RSS
feed in a side menu:
http://directory.google.com/Top/Reference/Libraries/Library_and_Information_Science/Technical_Services/Cataloguing/Metadata/RDF/Applications/RSS/News_Readers/
Is anyone
using blogs in classes? Any advice on how to set up
links to RSS feeds?
Thanks,
Amy Dunbar
UConn
Reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Amy,
I don’t use blogs in class and only find time to visit a
few each week
For RSS feeds, look at the left hand column at
http://www.rss-specifications.com/blog.htm
Bob Jensen
April 22,
2005 reply from Richard Campbell
[campbell@RIO.EDU]
Amy:
The www.derekfranklin.com site might not be a good
source for RSS info. Derek has switched to another
project on his site - search automation. There is an
interesting video below:
http://www.searchautomator.com/
Richard J. Campbell
mailto:campbell@rio.edu
Bob
Jensen's threads on Web logs and blogs, including warnings
to educators, are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
I wish them the very best for success in
this fetal stem-cell experiment and wish
this research could be expanded in every
possible way
University of
Wisconsin scientists seek FDA permission to
perform fetal stem-cell research on humans
with Lou Gehrig's disease, which has no cure
and is almost always fatal.
"Fetal Cell Therapy for Humans?" Wired
News, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,67308,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3
How to turn past crimes into current
cash: Hop from town to town with a scarlet
letter on your chest
Ohio Town Trying To
Raise $20,000 LOVELAND, Ohio -- Sheriff
Department Web sites let Ohioans pinpoint
exact locations where sexual offenders are
living in relation to their homes. One Ohio
community is taking a unique approach to
making their neighborhood safer, NBC 4
reported. Residents in Loveland said they
wanted safer streets and were willing to
take matters into their own hands to get a
sexual offender out of their neighborhood.
They were willing to pay to make him go
away. Residents in the upscale Cincinnati
suburb are pooling their money to pay a sex
offender nearly $20,000 to move.
"Community Willing To Pay Sex Offender To Go
Away," NBC Columbus, April 21, 2005
---
http://www.nbc4i.com/news/4403347/detail.html
Seven Ways of Reading a Poem
How come Dylan
Thomas could mesmerize audiences just by
opening his mouth, whereas some poets talk
into their sleeves and others prate like
Polonius? Given the perils of public
speaking, many fall back on default modes.
There may be as many reading styles as
grains of sand, but nowadays only a handful
of ways to read poetry in front of an
audience. Here they all are:
David Galef, "Seven Ways of Reading a Poem,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/18/galef
Jensen Comment: I remember being mesmerized
years ago on the Trinity University campus
during a poetry reading by Seamus Heaney.
It was a moment I will never forget ---
http://nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/1995/heaney-bio.html
April 25, 2005 reply from Linda Kidwell
[lak@NIAGARA.EDU]
My favorite
poetry reading was, believe it or not,
on the first day of the Urban Economics
class I took at Smith College. Randy
Bartlett opened the semester by reading
Carl Sandburg's Chicago (Hog Butcher for
the World, etc.). He read it again at
the end of the semester, and after
studying urban econ, it had a whole new
meaning for me.
His poetry
reading probably opened my mind to this
career (I was a geology major taking an
elective at the time). I still count
Randy as one of the best professors I
have ever known.
Linda Kidwell
p.s. I also
keep one of Randy's quotes on my door:
"I carry out research and publish
because it keeps my mind lively. I can't
ask my students to take on hard work
without my doing the same."
Surrender in the Battle of Poetry Web
Sites
Alan Cordle, a
research librarian who lives in Portland,
Ore., has managed the Web site,
www.foetry.com , anonymously since its
inception a little more a year ago. He
called his site the "American poetry
watchdog" and aimed to expose the national
poetry contests that he said "are often
large-scale fraud operations" in which
judges select their friends and students as
winners. But Mr. Cordle's identity, which he
says he protected to avoid recriminations
against those who joined in his fight, was
revealed earlier this month. The unmasking
was performed by an anti-Foetry Web site
that is also run anonymously and which used
some of Mr. Cordle's own aggressive tactics
- he once used a state open-records law to
unlock details about participants in a
contest sponsored by a state university
press - to remove his cloak of mystery.
Edward Wyatt, "Surrender in the Battle of
Poetry Web Sites," The New York Times,
April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/21/books/21poet.html?
What did Shakespeare really write?
Such Stuff as Footnotes Are Made On
I am among the few
professors who can identify a corrupt
Shakespearean manuscript — an inferior
facsimile of Hamlet, say, that an
Elizabethan actor recited to a printer in
return for a beaker of ale. I would compare
that manuscript to another version closer to
the original, detecting phrases and
locutions that better embody the Bard’s
verbal genius. Shakespeare never published
his plays, of course. But some actors were
better at remembering lines than others.
Thus, several variants of a given work might
exist. A good textual editor can discern
which versions are “fairer,” or more
authentic, than others more “foul” or
corrupt. I have been thinking about
Shakespeare, born April 23, 1564, and died
on that same date, at age 52. I’m age 52. By
what measure will I be remembered by the
digital literati with a research specialty
like mine, seemingly worthless at the dawn
of the Internet age? . . . Last year I was
fact-checking the final manuscript of my new
book
Interpersonal Divide: The Search for
Community in a Technological Age
(Oxford University
Press, 2005), when I found that 30 percent
of my Web-based footnotes no longer
functioned on the Internet. Footnotes
malfunction for many reasons — technicians
reformat folders and redesign sites or,
especially worrisome, revise content at the
same online address.
Michael Bugeja"Such Stuff as Footnotes Are
Made On," , Inside Higher Ed, April
22, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/22/bugeja
What is an average European worth in current U.S.
dollars?
As an example, a Cessna 182
carrying a pilot and three passengers and operating
non-commercially would require $4,995,210 of insurance
coverage, assuming the EU Member State applies the reduced
amount for passenger liability. This figure was calculated
as follows: $4,541,100 + $454,110 ($151,370 x 3 passengers)
= $4,995,210. Effective April 30, 2005, new European (EC)
regulations require that all aircraft operators (both
commercial and private) carry liability insurance coverage
with respect to passengers, baggage, cargo, and third
parties when operating within, into, out of, or over the
territory of a European Union (EU) Member State. The
required insurance includes coverage for war, terrorism,
hijacking, sabotage, unlawful seizure of aircraft, and civil
commotion.
"European Mandatory Aircraft Insurance Requirements,"
AOPA Online, April 20, 2005 ---
http://www.aopa.org/whatsnew/regulatory/ec_insurance.html
New curriculum at the University of Pennsylvania
Doug Lederman, "Sending Signals to Students," Inside
Higher Ed, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/22/penn
Every curriculum
sends a set of signals, so any
curricular review gives a college the
chance to broadcast messages to its
students (and the larger world, if it
cares) about what it thinks is
important. In restructuring its
undergraduate general education
curriculum this week for the first time
in nearly 20 years, here are some of the
things the University of Pennsylvania
had to say:
- At a place
perhaps best known for its business
and other preprofessional programs,
the liberal arts matter, too.
- Advanced
Placement courses should challenge
students in high school, not exempt
them from work in college.
- Students
shouldn’t come out of college
without being meaningfully exposed
to a culture other than the United
States.
The curriculum
approved overwhelmingly Tuesday at a
meeting of Penn’s faculty resulted from
several years of work in which Penn
engaged in an unusual
experiment in
which it put two groups of students
through completely different courses of
study and gauged the results.
A Literature Hoax
Maliszewski, who
heard Chabon give the lecture a few times,
reports that the audience listened with
fascination and horror. “The only problem
was,” he writes, “the personal story Chabon
was telling, while he may have presented it
as an authentic portrait of the artist, just
wasn’t true. There was no Adler; and no
Fischer either, for that matter. Nor does
there exist a Holocaust memoir called The
Book of Hell, nor an investigation by The
Washington Post. There is a young-adult book
titled Strangely Enough!, which is pretty
much as Chabon describes it; and it is
written by a man named Colby — though he
wasn’t, it must be said, a Nazi journalist
who disguised himself as a Jewish survivor
and holed up in the Maryland suburbs, but
rather a real author, based in New York City
and residing in Westchester County, who
served in the US Air Force Auxiliary after
World War II. . . .”
Scott McLemee, "Strangely Enough," Inside
Higher Ed, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/21/mclemee
KPMG settles Xerox case for $22.475 million in a rare
"fraud" action
The Securities and Exchange
Commission has announced that KPMG LLP has agreed to settle
the SEC's charges against it in connection with the audits
of Xerox Corp. from 1997 through 2000. As part of the
settlement, KPMG consented to the entry of a final judgment
in the SEC's civil litigation against it pending in the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of New York. The
final judgment, which is subject to approval by the
Honorable Denise L. Cote, orders KPMG to pay disgorgement of
$9,800,000 (representing its audit fees for the 1997-2000
Xerox audits), prejudgment interest thereon in the amount of
$2,675,000, and a $10,000,000 civil penalty, for a total
payment of $22.475 million. The final judgment also orders
KPMG to undertake a series of reforms designed to prevent
future violations of the securities laws.
Andrew Priest, "KPMG PAYS $22 MILLION TO SETTLE SEC
LITIGATION RELATING TO XEROX AUDITS,"
AccountingEducation.com, April 21, 2005 ---
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news6095.html
Jensen Comment: The SEC has filed many civil lawsuits
against auditing firms. However, it is rare to actually
accuse a CPA firm of outright fraud. I keep a scrapbook of
the legal problems of CPA firms, including KPMG at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#KPMG
On January 23, 2003
I pasted in the following from the
The Wall Street Journal
SEC Set
to File Civil Action Against
KPMG Over Xerox The Securities
and Exchange Commission is set
to file civil-fraud charges
against KPMG LLP as early as
next week for its role auditing
Xerox Corp., which last year
settled SEC accusations of
accounting fraud, people close
to the situation said. The
expected action by the SEC would
represent the second time in
recent years that the SEC has
charged a major accounting firm
with fraud. It comes at a
crucial juncture for the
accounting industry, which is
attempting to rebuild its
credibility and make changes
following more than a year of
accounting scandals at major
corporations. It also indicates
that, while the political furor
over corporate fraud has died
down, the fallout may linger for
some time.
The Wall Street Journal,
January 23, 2003 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB1043272871733131344,00.html?mod=technology_main_whats_news
Also see
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/23/business/23KPMG.html
If
the S.E.C. files a
complaint, KPMG would become
only the second major
accounting firm to face such
charges in recent decades.
The first was Arthur
Andersen, which settled
fraud charges in connection
with its audit of
Waste Management in
2001, the year before it was
driven out of business as a
result of the
Enron scandal.
The
S.E.C. settled a complaint
against Xerox in April, when
the company said it would
pay a $10 million fine and
restate its financial
results as far back as 1997.
The company later reported
that the total amount of the
restatement was $6.4
billion, with the effect of
lowering revenues and
profits in 1997, 1998 and
1999 but raising them in
2000 and 2001.
|
|
Bob Jensen's threads on the legal woes of CPA firms are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm
At least they will spend a little time in prison
A federal judge in Houston gave two
former Merrill Lynch & Co. officials substantially shorter
prison sentences than the government was seeking in a
high-profile case that grew out of the Enron Corp. scandal.
In a separate decision yesterday, another Houston federal
judge said that bank-fraud charges against Enron former
chairman Kenneth Lay would be tried next year, immediately
following the conspiracy trial against Mr. Lay, which is set
for January. Judge Sim Lake had previously separated the
bank-fraud charges from the conspiracy case against Mr. Lay
and his co-defendants, Enron former president Jeffrey
Skilling and former chief accounting officer Richard Causey.
The government had been seeking to try Mr. Lay on the
bank-fraud charges within about the next two months . . .
Judge Ewing Werlein, Jr. sentenced former Merrill investment
banking chief Daniel Bayly to 30 months in federal prison
and James Brown, who headed the brokerage giant's
structured-finance group, to a 46-month term. The federal
probation office, with backing from Justice Department
prosecutors, had recommended sentences for Messrs. Bayly and
Brown of about 15 and 33 years, respectively. Mr. Brown had
been convicted on more counts than Mr. Bayly.
John Emshwiller and Kara Scannell, "Merrill Ex-Officials'
Sentences Fall Short of Recommendation," The Wall Street
Journal, April 22, 2005, Page C3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111410393680013424,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Jensen Comment: I double dare you to go to my "Rotten to
the Core" threads and search for every instance of "Merrill"
---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the Enron scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
This made me think of "Teddy Roosevelt"
in the famous play entitled Arsenic and
Old Lace, but I suspect the student
below had a more fraudulent strategy.
A student at
Meredith College, in North Carolina, faces
federal charges of impersonating a military
officer, CBS News
reported.
The student, who wore an Air Force uniform,
explained frequent absences as missions to
Iraq and Afghanistan, and won a full
scholarship to the college based on her
alleged military service.
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed,
April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/22/qt
Hitler's Soviet Muslim Legions During World War II
Hitler's Soviet Muslim Legions
During World War II, hundreds of thousands of foreign
peoples joined with Hitler's legions to bring theirs people
into special status in Hitler's New Order. Tens of thousands
among them were Muslims, where the majority of them came
from Soviet Union. Under the banner of the crescent and the
swastika, these Soviet Muslims believe to become holy
warriors to liberated theirs land. But the end of this
unholy alliance was a disaster for them. The Pro-Nazi Soviet
Muslims When the German Army invaded Soviet Russia on June
22, 1941 they saw many of their opponent inhabitants...
Waffen-SS im Einsatz, February 2004 ---
http://stosstruppen39-45.tripod.com/index.html
Terrorizing voters in England: "It is not the
lifestyle of a Muslim to vote, and it is not from Islam,"
The extreme Islamist group accused
of threatening George Galloway and hijacking a meeting of
moderate Muslims is planning to step up its direct action
campaign to stop fellow believers from participating in the
election. The Guardian can reveal that the gang of youths
who stormed two election meetings this week are members of
al-Ghuraaba, an offshoot of the now disbanded radical
organisation al-Muhajiroun. The group's east London campaign
is being run by Abdul Mueed, a student, who promised
yesterday that al-Ghuraaba would continue to disrupt events
and target candidates to get across its message to Muslims
that they will go to hell if they vote on May 5. "It is not
the lifestyle of a Muslim to vote, and it is not from
Islam," Mr Mueed, 22, said last night. "George Galloway and
Oona King and the heads of all the political parties are
fighting Muslims, they hate the lifestyle of the Taliban and
the Muslims living in Iraq, that's why they are willing to
carpet bomb them all."
Audrey Gillan and Vikram Dodd, "Islamists step up campaign
to stop Muslims voting," The Guardian, April 22, 2005 ---
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,5176912-115819,00.html
April 24, 2005 --- A rather poor day on Mt. Washington
After two weekends in a row of
bluebird skies and warm temperatures, you had to know that
luck wouldn’t hold. Mount Washington doesn’t tend to let its
reputation recess for too long. Yesterday’s precipitation
ran the gamut of type and intensity. Snow, sleet, freezing
rain, freezing drizzle, and rain, along with thick fog, and
winds that have hit 93 mph made for a rather poor and
soaking day of observations ---
http://www.mountwashington.org/weather/index.php
Music: Games
People Play (especially these days) Turn up your speakers
---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/house.htm
Poetry:
Who says you can't write poems while wearing a green
eyeshade? Neal Hannon who is better known as one of the
XBRL accounting experts. But he also writes poetry.
To read some of Neal's poems, go to his poetry blog at
http://lifepoems.goldbambooblog.com/
You can read more about Neal Hannon at
http://barney.hartford.edu/faculty_details.php?first=Neal&last=Hannon
How good are newer cell phones that automatically
convert speech into text?
Phone makers have tried to solve
this (cell phone text entry)
problem by squeezing little keyboards
into the bodies of some phones. But these keyboards usually
make phones bigger and bulkier than normal, and often show
up only on costlier models, like the Treo or BlackBerry.
This week, my assistant Katie Boehret and I tested a new
phone that attempts to solve the text-entry problem in a
novel way that doesn't involve typing, and can be used on a
small, inexpensive phone with just a numerical keypad. This
new phone lets you dictate your text messages by just
speaking into the phone. The Samsung p207, $79.99 with a
two-year contract from Cingular Wireless, has built-in
"speech-to-text" technology: It turns what you say into text
on the screen. This technology, called VoiceMode, was
created by a small Massachusetts company called VoiceSignal
Technologies Inc. If it works properly, VoiceMode should
make composing a text message as simple as dictating a
voice-mail message. Unfortunately, it doesn't work very
well. In our tests, the system made so many errors requiring
tedious corrections that it might have been faster for us to
peck out our messages the old-fashioned way -- especially if
we used the abbreviations and shorthand phrases so common
among text-messaging fans.
Walter Mossberg, "A Phone That Takes Dictation: Testing
Voice-to-Text Function," The Wall Street Journal,
April 27, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111454952602617503,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Bob Jensen's threads on speech recognition are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Speech1
Astounding new hope for treatment of Alzheimer's
disease
The first attempt at gene therapy
for Alzheimer's Disease patients has appeared to
significantly delay worsening of the disease in a few people
who have tested it so far. According to scientists on
Sunday, far more research is needed to see if the
experimental treatment - which requires a form of brain
surgery - really helps. But if the approach pans out,
researchers say, delivering protective substances, called
growth factors, into a diseased brain holds the potential to
rescue some dying brain cells.
"Gene therapy cure for Alzheimer's?" Aljazeera, April 25,
2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/CE94C7EE-5EC0-4A1B-BA3D-7C16BD87FDE2.htm
On the leading edge of biology and economics: The
economics of brains
The hope seems to be that biological research will finally
help economists make sense of irrationality
The idea that understanding the
brain can inform economics is controversial but not new; for
20 years, behavioral economists have argued that psychology
should have a greater influence on the development of
economic models. What is new is the use of technology:
economists, like other researchers, now have at their
disposal powerful tools for observing the brain at work. The
most popular tool, functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI), has been around since the late 1980s; but only in
the past few years has it been used to study
decision-making, which is the crux of economic theory. The
result is the emerging field of “neuroeconomics.” A flurry
of recent papers in scientific and economic
journals—reviewed in the Journal of Economic Literature by
Caltech economics professor Colin Camerer and
colleagues—shows how researchers are using the neural basis
of decision-making to develop new economic models. At the
January meeting of the American Economic Association, the
world’s largest economics conference, the neuroeconomics
sessions were reportedly standing room only. The hope seems
to be that biological research will finally help economists
make sense of irrationality. Take recent brain-imaging
experiments by Princeton University psychologist Samuel
McClure. In the journal Science, McClure and colleagues
report that when subjects choose short-term monetary
rewards, different regions of the brain are active than when
they choose long-term ones. People don’t “discount” future
rewards according to a simple scheme, as many economists
have suggested. It seems the brain actually makes short-term
and long-term forecasts in different ways. The challenge for
economists lies in translating this sort of scientific
insight into, say, predictive models of how people plan
purchases or make retirement fund decisions.
Gregory T. Huang, "The Economics of Brains," MIT's
Technology Review, May 2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/issue/review_brains.asp?trk=nl
Beware of Counterfeit U.S. Postal Money Orders
In the last six months, the F.B.I.
and postal inspectors say, international forgers - mostly in
Nigeria, but also in Ghana and Eastern Europe - appear to
have turned new attention to the United States postal money
order. More than 3,700 counterfeit postal money orders were
intercepted from October to December, exceeding the total
for the previous 12 months, according to postal inspectors.
Moreover, 160 arrests have been made in the United States
since October in cases where people have been suspected of
knowingly receiving fraudulent postal money orders or trying
to cash them, Paul Krenn, a spokesman for the United States
Postal Inspection Service, said.
Tom Zeller Jr., "Authorities Note Surge in Online Fraud
Involving Money Orders," The New York Times, April
26, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/26/business/26forgery.html?
Bob Jensen's threads on consumer fraud are at
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/26/business/26forgery.html?
Tune into technology: Watch for this Digital Duo
show that's happily returning to PBS
Happily, the departure was
temporary. Tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. the program, renamed "PC
World's Digital Duo," returns to KCTS with the first of 26
gadget-packed half-hour episodes and a dynamic new co-host,
former Seattle Weekly technology columnist Angela Gunn.
Already the show has been picked up in public-TV markets
covering more than 60 percent of the U.S. population.
Paul Andrews, "New "Digital Duo" is dynamic blend of fun,
credibility," Seattle Times, April 25, 2005 ---
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2002251914_paul25.html
Jensen Comment: I always liked the Digital Duo
better than Computer Chronicles when both were
carried (usually back-to-back) on PBS stations. The Digital
Duo was never afraid to point out the bad and absolutely
stupid features of new hardware and software. They
definitely took a customer's perspective, whereas
Computer Chronicles generally was on the side of the
vendor, although Computer Chronicles was better about
having the vendors demo new products. I video taped many of
both shows and it's fun to go back and watch the struggle we
used to have with almost every product when technology was
new and often did not work. Times are better today in spite
of the dark cloud of security that moved in during the later
years.
FREE MUSIC DOWNLOADS
What's this...
Amazon has
FREE MUSIC DOWNLOADS!!!
Wow! Double Wow!
And to top it off, many of the DRM-free
music tracks are from popular artists,
including music not available on their
CDs. I'm not sure how recently this new
Amazon section was made available, but
it appears that they still have some
link bugs to work out.
Side note:
If you want to sidestep Amazon's deep
linking, Jesse Andrews created an
Amazon Music Helper
script -- based on
mozdev.org's
Greasemonkey
Firefox plug-in -- that converts
Amazon's MP3 links into direct download
links (via
Waxy).
Alexander Grundner, "Amazon Now Offering
Free Music Downloads,"
http://www.ehomeupgrade.com/entry/848/amazon_now_offering
Jensen Comment: Grundner makes this
sound a whole lot better than it is up
to this point in time. A lot of the
promised free stuff just isn't
available, at least not yet. |
|
Outstanding new healthy eating site from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
The federal government deserves praise for launching an
appetizing Web site to guide Americans toward healthier
eating habits. As for the unwired half of America? Let them
eat cake.
Robert MacMillan, "You Are What You Click," Washington
Post, April 20, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A4248-2005Apr20.html?referrer=email
The great USDA site is at
http://mypyramid.gov/
One
size doesn't fit all.
MyPyramid Plan can help
you choose the foods and
amounts that are right
for you. For a quick
estimate of what and how
much you need to eat,
enter your age, sex, and
activity level in the
MyPyramid Plan box.
For a detailed
assessment of your food
intake and physical
activity level, click on
MyPyramid Tracker.
Use the advice "Inside
MyPyramid" to help you
-
Make smart choices
from every food
group,
-
Find your balance
between food and
physical activity,
and
-
Get the most
nutrition out of
your calories.
|
|
|
Digital tests of personality: A
Myers-Briggs for the digital age.
In a
recent Random Access,
I referenced a
study that concluded you can tell a lot
about someone's personality by
analyzing the playlists on his or her
iPod. Not
long after that, I found myself standing
at a red light in midtown Manhattan
noticing that nearly everyone around me
had white wires winding from their ears
into their pockets. It was
then that it occurred to me that the
study was right. I was looking at little
white devices that held the key to what
makes these people click. And that is
where the iPod goes beyond cool and into
profound. It's a less accurate -- but
more interesting -- tool for
psychological analysis -- a
Myers-Briggs
for the digital
age.
Robert MacMillen,
"Test Your Personality,
Digitally," Washington Post,
April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A62545-2005Apr18.html?referrer=email
Botnets and phishing on your computer at this very
moment: Link forwarded by Jagdish Gangolly
Know your Enemy: Tracking Botnets: Using honeynets to
learn more about Bots ---
http://www.honeynet.org/papers/bots/
The Honeynet Project & Research Alliance
http://www.honeynet.org
Last Modified: 13 March 2005
Honeypots are a well known
technique for discovering the tools, tactics, and
motives of attackers. In this paper we look at a special
kind of threat: the individuals and organizations who
run botnets. A botnet is a network of compromised
machines that can be remotely controlled by an attacker.
Due to their immense size (tens of thousands of systems
can be linked together), they pose a severe threat to
the community. With the help of honeynets we can observe
the people who run botnets - a task that is difficult
using other techniques. Due to the wealth of data
logged, it is possible to reconstruct the actions of
attackers, the tools they use, and study them in detail.
In this paper we take a closer look at botnets, common
attack techniques, and the individuals involved.
You can read more about bots at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Bot1
New AAUP survey on faculty salaries
The AAUP’s survey on faculty
salaries — released every spring — also includes
institution-by-institution breakdowns that are widely
compared by faculty members. At the bottom of this article
are lists of the best paying private universities
(Rockefeller University is on top); public universities
(University of California at Los Angeles); liberal arts
colleges (Wellesley) and community colleges (Westchester
Community College). AAUP officials caution, however, against
reading too much into individual comparisons. The cost of
living varies widely in the United States, and many colleges
have large gaps in what they pay faculty members in certain
disciplines, so the averages tell only part of the story . .
. The complete AAUP
report and more information about the salary survey are
available on the association’s
Web site.
The AAUP survey does not
provide breakdowns by discipline, but a recent
study by the College and
University Professional Association for Human Resources
found that the highest average salaries were in law,
engineering and business. Scott Jaschik, "Pay
for Professors," Inside Higher Ed, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/04/25/pay
Average Salaries at Doctoral
Institutions, 2004-5
Rank |
Public |
Private |
Professor |
$97,948 |
$127,214 |
Associate |
$68,576 |
$82,456 |
Assistant |
$58,310 |
$70,640 |
Instructor |
$39,398 |
$44,380 |
Lecturer |
$46,007 |
$52,601 |
Why did the rich Mughals, Aztecs and Incas evolve into
poor civilizations today?
Mr. Acemoglu is the recipient of
the American Economic Association's John Bates Clark medal,
given every two years to the nation's best economist under
the age of 40. Mr. Acemoglu, 37 years old, is a professor at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The medal has
been a good predictor of future Nobel prize winners -- of
the 29 economists who have won the award since 1947, 11 went
on to win Nobel awards later in life, including Paul
Samuelson, Milton Friedman and Joseph Stiglitz. With a
detailed eye on long stretches of economic history, Mr.
Acemoglu has written several papers arguing that a nation's
political and social institutions play the key role in
guiding its economic destiny. In one paper he detailed how
civilizations that were rich compared with the rest of the
world in 1500 -- such as the Mughals, Aztecs and Incas --
evolved into poor countries today, a point that contradicts
the idea that geography is destiny. Instead, he says,
differing political institutions set up by colonial powers
in places like North America, South America and Africa, set
the very different economic courses traveled by countries in
these regions.
Jon E. Hilsenrath, "MIT's Acemoglu Wins a Top Medal In
Economics," The Wall Street Journal, April 25, 2005;
Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111438454919215501,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Princeton University alumni protest a
pending faculty appointment.
Word that he is up
for a job at Princeton has led some alumni
there to urge the university not to hire
him. The controversy comes at a time when
Princeton is also receiving pressure over
the tenure bid of a junior professor who
studies the Middle East and is seen as
taking positions more sympathetic to the
West than do many scholars in the field. On
Friday, The Daily Princetonian
reported that
alumni are contacting the university to
oppose Khalidi’s candidacy for an endowed
chair at the university. The newspaper
quoted Arlene Pedovitch, interim director of
the Center for Jewish Life at Princeton, as
saying “Some Princeton alumni are very
concerned about the possibility of Princeton
University hiring an individual who has a
political agenda rather than a scholarly
approach to history.”
"Middle East Wars Hit Princeton," Inside
Higher Ed, April 25, 2005 ---
Scott Jaschick,
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/25/princeton
The union acted on the request of
Palestinian academics
Britain’s primary
faculty union, the Association of University
Teachers, announced a boycott Friday of two
Israeli universities: Haifa University and
Bar-Ilan University, Reuters
reported.
The union acted on the request of
Palestinian academics, and the action was
promptly criticized by Jewish students and
faculty members in Britain.
Inside Higher Ed, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/25/qt
Professors claim that attacks on them in the U.S. were
deliberately orchestrated by government of Israel
According to Massad, Columbia's
Middle East studies classes are threatened by a vast
right-wing campaign cleverly “engineered to cancel out”
freedom of thought. Moreover, at the center of recent
attacks on those who disagree with U.S. and Israeli foreign
policies lies not a concern for truth or classroom decorum
and balance, but academic freedom—“and specifically
scholarship on Palestine.” These witch hunters, Massad says,
want us to “live the life of servitude to the state power,
as technocrats and as ideologues.” Academic freedom for
Massad is being able to freedom to teach without challenge
that “Established scholarship enumerates all [Israel's]
racist flaws and institutional racist practices” which he
says render the Jewish state “a racist state by law.” But
any disagreement, Massad says, can be safely discarded as
Zionist ideology, part of the conspiracy “propped up by the
likes of Campus-Watch, the David Project, and the ADL
[Anti-Defamation League],” who “make it...their business to
attack scholarly criticisms of Israeli policy.” Failing to
discard studies by “Israel's apologists” amounts to
“shutting down the educational process in favor of religious
theories of creationism.” Evidently America can learn from
Palestinian society’s principled anti-racism and passion for
historical truth. Tariq Ali then spoke and took the
conspiracy mania fully over the edge. He sees “what is
taking place on the campuses as part of the larger and wider
project which was initiated by the Sharon government, soon
before they went into Jenin [in March 2002] in the big
attempt to crush the intifada.” The decision to persecute
the poor academics “was made in Israel,” then “circulated”
to Israeli embassies, which somehow made it happen
worldwide. The Elders of Zion must be working overtime.
Alyssa A. Lappen, "Columbia's Anti-Jewish Conspiracy
Theorist," FrontPageMagazine, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17808
"David Horowitz’s War on Rational Discourse," by Graham
Larkin, Inside Higher Ed, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/25/larkin
Graham Larkin is a humanities fellow at Stanford University,
where he teaches in the Department of Art and Art History.
It has been
heartening to witness the recent runaway
success of Princeton emeritus Harry G.
Frankfurt’s latest book,
On Bullshit.
First
published as
an essay in 1988, Frankfurt’s splendid
study is largely an effort to
distinguish between lies and bullshit. A
liar, Frankfurt notes, acknowledges
truth-systems yet tries to pass off
information that is not true. “Someone
who lies and someone who tells the
truth,” he tells us, “are playing on
opposite sides, so to speak, in the same
game.” The bullshitter, by contrast,
fails to really acknowledge the validity
of any truth-claims or truth-systems.
The author
concludes that “the fact about himself
that the liar hides is that he is
attempting to lead us away from a
correct apprehension of reality; we are
not to know that he wants us to believe
something he supposes to be false. The
fact about himself that the bullshitter
hides, on the other hand, is that the
truth-values of his statements are of no
central interest to him; what we are not
to understand is that his intention is
neither to report the truth nor to
conceal it.”
When applying
Frankfurt’s useful distinction, we need,
at the very least, to recognize that if
something about a particular piece of
bullshit happens to be true this does
not make it any less bullshit, and that
lies and bullshit are by no means
mutually exclusive.
Enter L.A.
tabloid editor David Horowitz, liar
extraordinaire and author of the
incomparable bullshitting manual The
Art of Political War and Other Radical
Pursuits (Spence Publishing, 2000).
This book, much
applauded by
Karl Rove, promulgates a political
endgame in which brute force triumphs
over any notions of intelligence, truth
or fair play. The author contends that
“[y]ou cannot cripple an opponent by
outwitting him in a political debate.
You can only do it by following Lenin’s
injunction: ‘In political conflicts, the
goal is not to refute your opponent’s
argument, but to wipe him from the face
of the earth.’ ”
Continued in the article
Is this academic freedom in action? Is there any
basis for trying to convince students that the New World
Order (that Evil Empire with George Bush and Israel at the
helm) really has plans in place to "depopulate the earth"
with weapons of mass destruction?
Jane Christensen is an outspoken professor with little
backing for her outrageous claims: Should her university
allow her to preach these things her courses as part of the
curriculum plan?
"Web site stirs up criticism," by Natalie Jordan, Rocky
Mount Telegram, April 23, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ChristensenApril23
Tom Betts, chairman of N.C.
Wesleyan's board of trustees, said he thinks the
material on the Web site is offensive, but defended the
professor's right to display it.
"I find what's on her Web site
to be distasteful and despicable, and I disagree with
everything on it. In the most polite of terms, it is
disgraceful," Betts said. "However, this is America, and
academic freedom and free speech is what sets us apart
from the rest of the world. And I believe and hope most
people will see this Web site for what it is — the
opinions of a very, very far left person. And any
sensible person would see this as a joke — a very bad
joke.
"Everyone has an opinion, and
hearing all sides and drawing one's own conclusions is
what college is about. And the last thing we need to do
is tell somebody how to think. That's why we have
elections."
Megalinks in Political Science, by Jane T. Christensen
Associate Professor of Political Science North Carolina
Wesleyan College ---
http://faculty.ncwc.edu/Jchristensen/
NWO PLANS TO DEPOPULATE THE EARTH
HERE
Mossad Planning
Another Attack in US
(With Weapons
of Mass Destruction)
THE ISRAELI
CONNECTION TO 9/11
Israelis
Planning Targetted Kills in
US
US Arms Israel with NUKES
details
POL 495
9/11
The Road to Tyranny
This is the course the neo-nazis love to hate.
Online version will be available to everyone in the
country in spring 2006.
See you there!
She and Robert W. Jensen
and Ward Churchill sound a lot alike with their "Evil
Empire" rants ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
What is global warming? Is it real or theoretical?
Elizabeth Kolbert travelled from Alaska to Greenland,
visiting the laboratories of top scientists to get to the
heart of the debate over global warming. In this week’s
magazine, she publishes the first of a three-part series on
climate change, which she discusses here with Amy Davidson.
"What is global warming? Is it real, or theoretical?" The
New Yorker, April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/online/content/articles/050425on_onlineonly01
Vanishing glaciers: Antarctica's
big melt ---
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,15057664%255E2702,00.html
What’s the state of open-access science publishing
today?
Depending on who’s counting, 95
percent of research papers in the life sciences are still
locked up by the big commercial publishers—Elsevier,
Springer, and the rest. It’s ludicrous at a time when the
Internet has pushed the actual cost of distributing a
research paper close to zero . . . Scientific publishing is
a $10 billion global business, growing 10 percent a year.
They’re not going to let go without a fight. The Association
of American Publishers has hired [former congressperson] Pat
Schroeder as its president and chief lobbyist—the queen of
darkness. They went up to Capitol Hill and said we were
socializing scientific publishing. NIH knows where its purse
strings are.
Spencer Reiss, "Science Wants to Be Free," MIT's Technology
Magazine, May 2006 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/05/issue/forward_science.asp?trk=nl
Jensen Comment: We looked for the enemy and according to
Pogo "he is us." In an instant scientific papers could be
posted free to everybody at Web sites, and scientific
associations could set up refereeing processes that work
much like the way refereeing works to day. In fact the
refereeing process itself could even become more open and
subject the research findings to a broader audience of
critics. The problem is that reputations, tenure, and
performance rewards are currently built upon the "elitist
rankings" of journals where professors publish. The enemy
is the system itself that cannot break the bindings of
tradition.
Bob Jensen's threads on the pricing frauds of those
"queens of darkness" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#ScholarlyJournals
Over 140 colleges have some type of "student managed
fund" in finance that allows students to manage a small
portion of their college's endowment fund. Trinity
University has such a program under the direction of Phil
Cooley. Penn State, however, has taken this idea to a whole
new level by forming a company called the Nittany Lion Fund
that competes with Wall Street in attracting outside
investors.
Investors have placed more than
$2.2 million into the hands of students at Pennsylvania
State University's Smeal College of Business in University
Park. The Nitany Lion Fund, an investment portfolio
designed to achieve long-term captial growth for investors
is structured as a limited liability company with investor
dollars. The investment strategy is focused on undervalued
companies with a minimum market capitalization of $800
million.
BizEd from the AACSB, May/June 2005, Page 16.
Here's a most laudable way to teach investing to
children: Grandparents might consider this as a model
If business schools want to
encourage more minorities to enter business careers, they
might take note of the Ariel Community Academy, a unique
program designed by Ariel Capital Management. Through a
partnership between Ariel and the Chicago-based investment
firm John Nuveen & Company, the Academy grants each
incomeing first-grade class at the William Shakespeare
Elementary School an investment portfolio of $20,000. The
two companies then help the children follow that money in
the stock market through their eighth-grade graduation.
(The accumulated wealth then goes toward their
college education.)
"The littlest Investors," BizED from the AACSB,
May/June 2005, Page 20.
African American women must fix behavior or risk death
from AIDS
Nearly three-quarters of America's
new cases of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, are
African-American women. Black women between 25 and 44 are 13
times more likely to die of the disease than white women of
the same age. It is one of the most underreported news
stories of this new decade, and sadly, more women will die
before we pay attention. Black women and their sexuality are
the focus of Wyatt's research since she conducted the first
study of black women's sexuality in 1980. A professor and
associate director of the AIDS Institute at the University
of California at Los Angeles, she included 4,000-5,000 women
ages 18-80 in her research for "Stolen Women: Reclaiming Our
Sexuality, Taking Back Our Lives" (Wiley, $12.95).
Rochelle Riley, "Black women must fix behavior or risk death
from AIDS," Jewish World Review, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0405/riley041805.php3
A Group at Princeton Where 'No' Means 'Entirely No'
Yet another alternate sexual
lifestyle is being promoted by a group of Princeton
undergraduates: one of chastity and abstinence outside of
marriage. Members of the Anscombe Society maintain that
campus life has become so drenched in sexuality, from the
flavored condoms handed out by a resident adviser to the
social pressure of the hook-up scene, that Princeton needs a
voice arguing for traditional sexual values. Traditional, at
least, from the days before their parents went to college.
Iver Peterson, "A Group at Princeton Where 'No' Means
'Entirely No'," The New York Times, April 18, 2005
---
http://snipurl.com/PrincetonApril18
A good friend is someone from
whom we do not keep secrets, and who nevertheless
appreciates us.
León Daudí
Originality is undetected
plagiarism.
William R. Inge
Free electronic version of The Art of
Writing ---
http://www.wordtheque.com/pls/wordtc/new_wordtheque.w6_start.doc?code=11260&lang=EN
Free electronic version of Tom Sawyer
---
http://www.wordtheque.com/pls/wordtc/new_wordtheque.w6_start.doc?code=11291&lang=EN
Other free electronic books ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/searchh.htm#ElectronicBooks
It pays to play fair and provide great and creative
service
Google Profits Up 477%
---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7532-2005Apr21.html?referrer=email
eBay Inc.'s profit to jump 28
percent ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5899-2005Apr20.html?referrer=email
Yahoo Inc. and Intel Corp. both
reported strong first quarter earnings ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2490-2005Apr19.html?referrer=email
Any idea how many great IT companies are rooted in
some way in Stanford University?
I don't know the answer, but they include Intel (e.g., Ted
Hoff), Cisco, HP, Yahoo, and Google. There are others that
I can't think of off the top of my head.
Tidbit from the Washington Post on April 22, 2005
Cisco was founded
in December 1984 in Menlo Park, California, by a small group
of technologists from Stanford University. In what year did
it pass $1 billion in annual revenue?
A.
1985
B.
1990
C.
1994
D.
1999
New hope for many blind people
Stanford physicists and eye doctors
have teamed up to design a retinal prosthesis system that
could someday bring artificial vision to those blinded by
retinal degeneration.
From the Stanford University alumni newsletter on Aprill 22,
2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/StafordApril22
How to turn past crimes into current cash: Hop from
town to town with a scarlet letter on your chest
Ohio Town Trying To Raise $20,000
LOVELAND, Ohio -- Sheriff Department Web sites let Ohioans
pinpoint exact locations where sexual offenders are living
in relation to their homes. One Ohio community is taking a
unique approach to making their neighborhood safer, NBC 4
reported. Residents in Loveland said they wanted safer
streets and were willing to take matters into their own
hands to get a sexual offender out of their neighborhood.
They were willing to pay to make him go away. Residents in
the upscale Cincinnati suburb are pooling their money to pay
a sex offender nearly $20,000 to move.
"Community Willing To Pay Sex Offender To Go Away," NBC
Columbus, April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.nbc4i.com/news/4403347/detail.html
When she's pretending to be on her cell phone, she
simply doesn't want to listen to you
You know all those annoying
people who talk into their cell phones as if you weren't
standing right next to them? It turns out that many of them
aren't really talking to anybody. The New York Times
recently described research at Rutgers University as well as
the Ethics and Public Policy Center that found that a great
number of cell phone users are faking it. A number of people
make fake phone calls on their cell phones just for the
benefit of those around them. Someone who's late for work
may enter the office talking to "an important client" to
cover her tardiness. Others pretend they get a call when
they don't want to talk to someone who's standing right in
front of them. Not surprisingly, some of those big deals you
hear people negotiate on the phone are just done to impress
those within earshot. Men will pretend to be on a call as
they walk over to hit on a woman. Women will pretend to be
on a call to avoid getting hit on by men.
"Faking It," CBS News, April 20, 2005 ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/04/20/opinion/garver/main689651.shtml
China Risks Creating Its Own Worst Nightmare: Bush
presidency has neglected the great strategic challenge of
the future
China's violent verbal assault on
Japan does not spin out of the past but out of the future.
Complaints about war crimes and history books are so many
fig leaves. The driving force in this dangerous dispute is
power politics in Asia. The anger the two nations display as
they demand apologies that neither will make is a clear
expression of the rebalancing of power throughout Asia that
is occurring as China ascends, Japan responds and India
shrewdly reaps benefits from the clash of the two other
Asian titans. Tomorrow is suddenly now. Sustained mutterings
from policy pundits that the Bush presidency has neglected
the great strategic challenge of the future -- power
relationships in Asia -- are made flesh by the accelerating
triangular competition for global influence.
Jim Hoagland, "China Risks Creating Its Own Worst
Nightmare," Washington Post, April 21, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111403346851312480,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Good Samaritans beware
A 24-year-old Macomb County woman
has been charged with filing a false police report for
reporting that she was raped after getting a flat tire on
Interstate 696 in suburban Detroit . . . Police say
Zerzycki told them on April 6 that she got a flat tire
driving east about 1 a.m. on I-696. She said a man changed
the flat, then raped her in her car. She later admitted it
did not happen, police say.
"Woman accused of lying in I-696 rape claim," Mlive.com,
April 22, 2005
http://www.mlive.com/newsflash/michigan/index.ssf?/base/news-24/111416397158720.xml&storylist=newsmichigan
Be careful about the content of any email message sent
on your company's computer
Trespass lawsuits stemming from
unsolicited, anonymous e-mail are not viable claims under
California law, some First Amendment experts say. But
businesses still file such actions, largely to determine the
authors’ identities via subpoenas to Internet service
providers. "They are a ruse to unmask somebody voicing an
opinion they don’t agree with," says Megan E. Gray, a
Washington, D.C., lawyer. "They have no intention of taking
[these cases] to trial." Shearman & Sterling sees things
differently. Last month, the law firm filed a trespass and
breach of contract action in San Francisco Superior Court
involving an e-mail sent to a staff manager’s Shearman.com
account. The communication forwarded a post about the
manager from Craigslist.org, an online community billboard.
The writing, since removed, was posted on the site’s "rants
and raves" section. Filed as a "Jane Doe" action, the
lawsuit alleges the sender is a current or recent Shearman
employee who was under contract to use the firm’s computers
only for legitimate business purposes. "The e-mail was
hateful and racist, and sending it was a verbal assault of
one of our staff members," says Shearman partner Stephen D.
Hibbard, who filed the lawsuit March 25. Shearman & Sterling
LLP v. Jane Doe 1, CGC-05-439829.
Stephanie Francis Ward, "LAW FIRM FILES A COMPLAINT FOR
‘HATEFUL’ E-MAIL: Some First Amendment Experts Find Such
Claims Not Viable," ABA Journal, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.abanet.org/journal/ereport/a22craig.html
Equitable trial: E&Y fights for its future
In one of the biggest court cases
in British accounting history, Ernst & Young battles it out
with life assurance firm, Equitable Life, at London's High
Court. At stake? The future of the Big Four firm. Equitable
Life's Ł2bn lawsuit against Ernst & Young, its former
auditors, kicked off on Monday 11 April, 2005. Equitable is
suing E&Y for alleged negligence in the overseeing of its
accounts in the late 1990s. As well as explaining their
cases in court, both parties submitted written explanations
of their case. Here, you can read Equitable's claim against
the Big Four firm, and E&Y's furious response.
"Equitable trial: E&Y fights for its future," Financial
Director, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.financialdirector.co.uk/specials/1140053
Bob Jensen's threads on the legal woes of E&Y ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Ernst
Large CPA firms are in a settlement mood
Deloitte & Touche LLP is expected
to announce today it will pay a $50 million fine to settle
Securities and Exchange Commission civil charges that it
failed to prevent massive fraud at cable company Adelphia
Communications Corp. In another case, the now-largely
defunct accounting firm Arthur Andersen LLP agreed to a $65
million settlement in a class-action suit by investors in
WorldCom Inc. over losses from stocks and bonds of the
once-highflying telecommunications company now known as MCI
Inc. These follow a $22.4 million settlement the SEC reached
last week with KPMG LLP related to its audits of Xerox Corp.
from 1997 through 2000, and a $48 million settlement by
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP last month to end class-action
litigation over its audit of Safety-Kleen Corp., an
industrial-waste-services company that filed for
bankruptcy-court protection in 2000.
Diya Gullapalli, "Deloitte to Be Latest to Settle In
Accounting Scandals," The Wall Street Journal, April
26, 2005; Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111444033641815994,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
There are of course other suits that are not settled.
Bob Jensen's threads on the legal woes of large auditing
firms are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#others
Adelphia Communications Corp. agreed to a $715 million
settlement
Adelphia Communications Corp.
agreed to a $715 million settlement with the U.S. Justice
Department and Securities and Exchange Commission to resolve
claims stemming from the corporate looting and
accounting-fraud scandal that toppled the country's
fifth-largest cable-television operator.
Peter Grant and Deborah Solomon," "Adelphia to Pay $715
Million In 3-Way Settlement," The Wall Street Journal,
April 26, 2005, Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111445555592816193,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
But $715 only goes a small way in replacing the
billions lost by creditors and stockholders
The family that founded the Adelphia Communications
Corporation, the big cable operator, will forfeit almost its
entire fortune (I think about $1.5 billion)
to the company to pay for a $715 million fund to compensate
investors who lost money when the company collapsed, the
government said yesterday.
Geraldine Fabrikant, "Rigas Family to Cede Assets to
Adelphia," The New York Times, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/26/business/media/26settle.html
Bob Jensen's updates on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
EU and U.S. Agree to Align Corporate-Accounting Rules
Friday's accord broke through the
acrimony of the past few years between the U.S. and EU on
financial regulation. The EU has been upset about its
companies having to respect tough U.S. corporate-governance
rules under the Sarbanes-Oxley reforms, and the U.S. has
criticized Europe for being slack in its willingness to
fight terror financing and other issues.
John W. Miller, "EU and U.S. Agree to Align
Corporate-Accounting Rules," The Wall Street Journal,
April 25, 2005; Page C4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111416154591914343,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
“1. Derivatives; 2. Derivatives; and 3. Derivatives!”
Dennis Beresford quoting the Director of the SEC back in
about 1993 when asked what the three major issues were that
the FASB should be working on for a new accounting standard
(which ultimately became FAS 133).
Accounting for Derivative Financial Instruments is the
Big Dispute in Accounting Rule Harmonization
The S.E.C. said it expected about
300 companies, primarily European, to file annual reports in
2006 that use international standards, which are now
required in Australia and in the European Union. While
Australian companies must follow all international rules,
the European Commission gave European companies permission
to opt out of complying with major parts of a rule
concerning derivative securities. Donald T. Nicolaisen, the
S.E.C.'s chief accountant, said on Friday that the S.E.C.
would require any company that opted out to disclose what
its results would have been under the full rule. And, he
added, if the opt-out were still in force by the time the
S.E.C. accepted international standards, "my guess is we
would require a reconciliation" before would accepting such
a company's filing. The S.E.C.'s road map was laid out last
week in an article by Mr. Nicolaisen in the Journal of
International Law and Business from Northwestern University.
He said in the article that both American and international
accounting rules "have their place in U.S. capital markets"
and that efforts toward convergence of the rules should be
encouraged.
Floyd Norris, "Europe Welcomes Accounting Plan; U.S. Remains
a Bit Wary," The New York Times, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/23/business/worldbusiness/23account.html?
Microsoft Comes Under Fire for Reversal on Gay Rights
Bill
The Microsoft Corporation, at the
forefront of corporate gay rights for decades, is coming
under fire from gay rights groups, politicians and its own
employees for withdrawing its support for a state bill that
would have barred discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation. Many of the critics accused the company of
bowing to pressure from a prominent evangelical church in
Redmond, Wash., located a few blocks from Microsoft's
sprawling headquarters. The bill, or similar versions of it,
has been introduced repeatedly over three decades; it failed
by one vote Thursday in the State Senate. Gay rights
advocates denounced Microsoft, which had supported the bill
for the last two years, for abandoning their cause. Blogs
and online chat rooms were buzzing on Thursday with
accusations that the company, which has offered benefits to
same-sex partners for years, had given in to the Christian
right.
Sarah Kershaw, "Microsoft Comes Under Fire for Reversal on
Gay Rights Bill," The New York Times, April 22, 2005
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/22/national/22gay.html
Religious Tolerance or Lack Thereof at the Air Force
Academy
According to recent news reports,
the U.S. Air Force Academy, which is just now recovering
from one series of scandals involving harassment (and worse)
directed at female cadets and another involving underage
drinking, now finds itself embroiled in yet another case of
questionable behavior. In the last few years there have been
some 55 complaints of religious bias at the Academy. Johnny
Whitaker, an Academy spokesperson said that some of the
complaints involved religious slurs, while others involved
proselytizing in inappropriate places. He went on to say
that "there have been cases of maliciousness,
mean-spiritedness and attacking or baiting someone over
religion." And, last year the Air Force Academy football
coach, Fisher DeBerry, was called to task for promoting
Christianity to his players with a locker room banner that
included the lines "I am a Christian first and last.... I am
a member of Team Jesus Christ." DeBerry removed the banner,
but is considering continuing team prayers after football
games next season -- but this time without reference to a
specific religion.
Mark H. Shapiro, "Tolerance or Lack Thereof at the Air Force
Academy," The Irascible Professor, April 22, 2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-22-05.htm
Finger finding woman is fingered by police
The woman who claimed she found a
finger in her bowl of Wendy's chili last month has been
arrested, the latest twist in a bizarre case about how the 1
1/2-inch finger tip ended up in a bowl of fast food. Anna
Ayala was taken into custody late Thursday at her Las Vegas
home. She was arrested on a warrant alleging grand larceny
and attempted grand larceny, Las Vegas Police Sgt. Chris
Jones said. Authorities said would not provide further
details until a news conference Friday afternoon in San
Jose, Calif. -- the city where Ayala claimed she bit down on
the finger in a mouthful of her steamy stew.
"Woman in Wendy's Finger Case Is Arrested," The New York
Times, April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Wendys-Finger.html
Could you give up television and movies?
But it seems like
the right book to be reading now, during
national
TV Turnoff Week.
Not because the unnamed European professor
in Toussaint’s book is an example of what
happens to someone who succumbs to the tube.
Quite the contrary: Television is a book
about how pride in not watching can render
you even more obsessed. The narrator
(sounding a little like Trilling) announces
that he seldom turned the box on: “Apart
from major sporting events, which I always
watched with pleasure, and of course the
news and the occasional election-night
special, I never watched much of anything on
television.” He says he avoided seeing
movies there, for the same reason he never
read books in Braille. “Although I never
tried it,” he continues, “I was always quite
sure I could give up watching television
anytime, just like that, without suffering
in the least, without suffering the
slightest ill effect — in short, that there
was no way I could be considered dependent.”
Scott McLemee, "The Plug-In Drug," Inside
Higher Ed, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/26/mclemee
Reporter asked to resign from The New York Times
after article about fraternities
The Los Angeles Times asked
embattled staff writer Eric Slater for his resignation
Monday following an investigation into his story about
Chico's Greek system, the reporter said. The request came
from Times Managing Editor Dean Baquet and others during a
Monday morning meeting, Slater told the Enterprise-Record.
Slater declined to comment on the specifics of the Times'
request or his response, but did say he has retained the
services of a wrongful-termination attorney.
Melissa Daugherty, "Reporter asked to leave Times,"
ChicoER, April 19, 2005 ---
http://www.chicoer.com/Stories/0,1413,135%7E25088%7E2824091,00.html
Duke and Pace researchers shed light
on corporate tax shelters
A study by researchers from Duke
University and Pace University found that use of corporate
tax shelters not only allows organizations to avoid billions
of dollars in annual tax payments, it may also help
companies artificially enhance their attractiveness to
investors by reducing levels of debt. The study also
explores some commonly used tax shelters and the
characteristics of firms that have employed these shelters.
Finance professors John R. Graham of Duke's Fuqua School of
Business and Alan L. Tucker of Pace's Lubin School of
Business collected the largest known sample of tax shelters
utilized by corporations during the past 25 years.
"Duke and Pace researchers shed light on corporate tax
shelters," Lubin, December 22, 2004 ---
http://snipurl.com/DukePace
Bob Jensen's threads on taxation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
Class-Rank Plan Faces Trouble in Texas
Critics say the influx of
top-10-percent students at the University of Texas--and to a
lesser extent, at Texas A&M University at College Station,
the state's other flagship institution--risks crowding out
other qualified students, especially graduates of
academically competitive high schools who did not rank in
the top of their class. They point to SAT scores for
freshmen at the Austin campus as cause for alarm, noting
that in both 2003 and 2004, students outside the top 10
percent outscored their higher-ranking classmates on the
test. "There is great concern expressed to me by alumni
about the dumbing down of the University of Texas," says
State Sen. Jeff Wentworth, a San Antonio Republican who has
introduced a bill to eliminate the law. But supporters of
the class-rank plan say standardized exams are a poor
predictor of college success. Top-10-percent students at
UT-Austin have consistently outperformed their peers
academically, they say, and their retention and graduation
rates are higher as well.
Karen Fischer, "Class-Rank Plan Faces Trouble in Texas:
Lauded by Bush, gurantee of college admission (for the top
10% of each high school's graduates) is now being
challenged," Chronicle of Higher Education, April 22,
Page A25.
Can Black Studies Be Saved?
Shelby Steele, a research fellow at
Stanford University's Hoover Institution, takes an even more
critical view. To his mind, universities never had a
legitimate reason for establishing black-studies
programs."It was a bogus concept from the beginning because
it was an idea grounded in politics, not in a particular
methodology," he says. "These programs are dying of their
own inertia because they've had 30 or 40 years to show us a
serious academic program, and they've failed."
Robin Wilson, "Can Black Studies Be Saved?," Chronicle of
Higher Education, April 22, 2005, Page A9.
Decision due on whether government can seize Social
Security benefits for delinquent student loans
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed
Monday to decide whether the federal government should be
permitted to seize a portion of the Social Security benefits
of borrowers more than 10 years after they defaulted on
their student loans. The court will try to adjudicate
conflicting language between the Higher Education Act and a
1982 law on debt collection, with many millions of dollars
in student loan debt at stake. In its term that begins next
October, the court will review a July 2004 ruling by the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Lockhart v.
U.S. (04-881), a case that was brought in 2002 by a
Washington State man named James Lockhart.
Doug Lederman, "Court to Rule on Delinquent Debt," Inside
Higher Ed, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/26/default
Flashback on a wonderful but failed effort
The Wall Street Journal, April 26,
1977
The government plans to switch
highway speed-limit signs to the metric system in late 1978.
Under the tentative highway administration plan, the
federally mandated 55 miles-an-hour speed limit would be
converted to 90 kilometers an hour on road signs.
From the Washington Post on April 19, 2005
Game Informer, a
magazine covering the video game industry, has a circulation
of just more than 2 million people. According to Advertising
Age, it has more readers than all of the following
publications except one. Which is it?
A.
AARP Magazine
B.
Entertainment Weekly
C.
Martha Stewart Living
D.
Rolling Stone
Lawyer-Accountant Porn Team: Or is that the Briefs
and Books team?
Criminal defense attorney Ronald S.
Miller does more than file briefs he also takes them off.
Miller has spent days in front of a judge and nights in
front of a camera as Don Hollywood, a porn star. His wife, a
former accountant, is also a porn star. "My whole life, I've
been one of those people who sees the wet paint sign and has
to go up and touch it to see if it's wet," said the
56-year-old Miller. "I want to experience everything, try
everything."
"L.A. Attorney Moonlights As a Porn Star," ABC News,
April 21, 2005 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/US/LegalCenter/wireStory?id=690122
Speaking of metaphors, the New York Press's Matt
Taibbi--fleetingly notorious for a highly unfunny piece a
few weeks back about the impending death of the pope--is
back doing the one thing he does well--making fun of the New
York Times' Thomas Friedman for his dreadful use of
metaphors. From Taibbi's review of Friedman's new book,
The World Is Flat.
Thomas Friedman does not get these
things right even by accident. It's not that he occasionally
screws up and fails to make his metaphors and images agree.
It's that he always screws it up. He has an anti-ear, and
it's absolutely infallible; he is a Joyce or a Flaubert in
reverse, incapable of rendering even the smallest details
without genius. The difference between Friedman and an
ordinary bad writer is that an ordinary bad writer will,
say, call some businessman a shark and have him say some
tired, uninspired piece of dialogue: Friedman will have him
spout it. And that's guaranteed, every single time. He never
misses. . . . Predictably, Friedman spends the rest of his
huge book piling one insane image on top of the other, so
that by the end--and I'm not joking here--we are meant to
understand that the flat world is a giant ice-cream sundae
that is more beef than sizzle, in which everyone can fit his
hose into his fire hydrant, and in which most but not all of
us are covered with a mostly good special sauce.
Opinion Journal, April 21, 2005
Music:
Reflections (turn your speakers up) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/reflections.htm
A lie can make its
way half way around the world before the truth can get its
pants on.
Winston Churchill as quoted by Alan Dershowitz at
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=13590
Psycho for real: Mom's in the freezer
A case of cold stash for cash: Do you suppose she could
have died from Spam overdose?
As a teenager, Philip Schuth
was teased mercilessly by the other kids because his mother
still walked him to school. As an adult, he lived with his
mother, cut his backyard with a scythe, and once bought $150
worth of Spam in a single grocery store outing. But the
strangest thing of all would come to light over the weekend:
Schuth had kept his mother's remains in a basement freezer
for years while he went on collecting her Social Security
checks.
"Man Who Put Mom in Freezer Had Odd History," MyWay,
April 26, 2005 ---
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050426/D89N9TE80.html
Ben Gazzara: "I was never depressed when I had
cancer."
Actor Ben Gazzara, whose film
credits include "Summer of Sam" and "Dogville," told a group
of mental health professionals that he had more trouble
beating depression than cancer. At a mood disorders
symposium Wednesday, Gazzara told how a bout with oral
cancer five years ago was easier to deal with than two
previous episodes of depression. "That was nothing," he
said of the cancer. "And that's a reason to be depressed. I
was never depressed when I had cancer." Gazzara described
how his struggles with depression had stopped him from
working. He finished "They All Laughed" while recovering
from the first incident in 1980. "I was in a depression
during the whole shooting and I was terrific in that film,"
Gazzara told the audience. "And
I don't remember doing it."
Alex Dominguez, "Actor Ben Gazzara says depression was
tougher to beat than cancer ," Atlanta Journal
Constitution, April 21, 2005 ---
http://www.ajc.com/
SpongeBob Square Pants Incident: Writings of a
professor dysfunctional to a college's fund raising efforts
In an interview Wednesday night, De
La Torre said that he quit — giving up tenure he won a few
months ago — because of a letter from Hope’s president,
James E. Bultman, criticizing his writings and suggesting
that they were making it difficult for the college to raise
money. While De La Torre did not release the letter, he
confirmed reports that it said that his writings had
“irreparably damaged the reputation of Hope in our
community” and that “when people are displeased with what we
do, their only recourse is to exercise their options with
regard to enrollment and gifting.” Hope is affiliated with
the Reformed Church in America. And the letter particularly
took issue with columns De La Torre wrote in The Holland
Sentinel mocking some Christian leaders. One of the columns
that angered the president was a piece mocking evangelicals
who criticized the role of SpongeBob SquarePants in a video
encouraging tolerance toward gay people.
Scott Jaschik, "Did SpongeBob Article Cost Professor a Job?"
Inside Higher Ed, April 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/28/hope
Jensen Comment: The
problem with academic freedom is that there are sharp edges
on both sides of the blade. Do you suppose there are many
blonde philanthropists out there? Hmmm! And all my jokes
about growing old --- Do you suppose?
"Handout Hysteria" or Insensitivity?
Jonathan Bean is a
popular professor at Southern Illinois
University at Carbondale — even though his
libertarian politics don’t always coincide
with his students’ views. A historian, he
was just named Teacher of the Year in the
College of Liberal Arts.But in the last two
weeks, he has found himself under attack in
his department — with many of his history
colleagues questioning his judgment for
distributing an optional handout about the
“Zebra Killings,” a series of murders of
white people in San Francisco in the 1970s.
His dean also told his teaching assistants
that they didn’t need to finish up the
semester working with him, and she called
off discussion sections of his course for a
week so TA’s would not have to work while
considering their options.Students and
professors at the university are trading
harsh accusations about insensitivity and
censorship, talking about possible lawsuits,
and assessing the damage. Shirley Clay
Scott, dean of the College of Liberal Arts,
sent a memo to faculty members warning that
they could “easily self-destruct if we do
not exercise restraint and reason.” Support
for Bean appears strong on the campus, at
least outside of his department and his
dean’s office, and several national groups
that defend professors who get in trouble
for their views have offered to help him.
Scott Jaschik, "‘Handout Hysteria’ or
Insensitivity?" Inside Higher Ed,
April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/29/siu
Growing problem of "anti-Semitism" on U.K. campuses
The British Association of
University Teachers has now created a blacklist against
Jewish Israeli academics -- really a blue and white list --
reminiscent of the worst abuses of McCarthyism. And just as
McCarthyism was a barrier to peace between the U.S. and the
Soviet Union - by contributing to a dangerous atmosphere in
which each side vilified and threatened the other - so too
does the British lecturers' boycott endanger the progress
now being made toward peace between the Israelis and
Palestinians. It is not surprising therefore that even the
Palestinian Al-Quds University in Jerusalem released a
statement against the British association blacklist, saying,
"We are informed by the principle that we should seek to win
Israelis over to our side, not to win against them ...
Therefore, informed by this national duty, we believe it is
in our interest to build bridges, not walls; to reach out to
the Israeli academic institutions, not to impose another
restriction or dialogue-block on ourselves." . . . It's a
good thing Israel has only to make peace with its
Palestinian neighbors and not European university
professors. The terrible message being sent by this
anti-Semitic action --
anti-Semitic because it will apply only to Israeli Jews, not
Arabs or Christians -- is that
the Jewish state will not be rewarded for taking steps
toward peace and ending the occupation. Instead it will be
punished.
Alan M. Dershowitz, "From Britain, with bigotry,"
National Post," April 27, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/BritainBigotry
Growing problem of "anti-Semitism" on U.S. campuses
Alan Dershowitz is the Felix
Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard University Law
School. He is an internationally respected attorney and
human rights activist. At one time he was actively involved
as an attorney in the Soviet Jewry Movement and helped to
free Natan Sharansky from the USSR. He is recognized as a
member of the liberal establishment yet a strong supporter
of Israel. He has also become aware of the continual
anti-Israel bias that is growing on college campuses in the
United States. Below is an edited transcript of his speech
at UC Berkeley, one of the most anti-Israel campuses in the
United States. Dershowitz addressed an audience of 1,200
people on April 29, 2004, about the
growing problem of anti-Semitism on
U.S. campuses.
"Making the Case for Israel," FrontPageMagazine, June
1, 2004 ---
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=13590
Jensen Comment: I
spent an interesting year in a think tank with Alan at a
time when he was on the faculty of Harvard Law School but
before he became famous from his controversial books books
defending the likes of Angela Davis, OJ Simpson, and many
other controversial persons in famous cases.
Way back then, I learned full well
that Alan's concept of the ideal lawyer is one who would put
on a great defense of Hitler or OJ Simpson or Bin Ladin. He
can be very outspoken with his own personal opinions and
then totally detach himself from his own opinions when
coming to the brilliant defense of virtually anybody with
opinions that he might find personally disgusting. Perhaps
we should have more professors with such skills when
teaching both sides of a controversial issue upon which they
personally have one-sided preferences.
See
http://www.law.harvard.edu/faculty/directory/facdir.php?id=12
Or better yet go to
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0220641/
Some of his quotes are at
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/a/alan_m_dershowitz.html
Also see
http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/alan_m._dershowitz/
Examples from various sources are shown below:
What would I do if Hitler asked
me to defend him? Yes, I would defend him. The
alternatives would be worse. Hitler would either go free
because nobody would defend him, or go to trial without
a lawyer. And I would win.
All sides in a trial want to
hide at least some of the truth.
Judges are the weakest link in
our system of justice, and they are also the most
protected.
The court of last resort is no
longer the Supreme Court. It's "Nightline."
The defendant wants to hide the
truth because he's generally guilty.
The defense attorney's job is to
make sure the jury does not arrive at that truth.
The judge also has a truth he
wants to hide: He often hasn't been completely candid in
describing the facts or the law.
The prosecution wants to make
sure the process by which the evidence was
obtained is not truthfully
presented, because, as
often as not, that process will raise questions.
Critical professor not allowed to attend
a public lecture
When
Chester E. Finn Jr.,
was asked to give a
talk at George Mason University two years
ago, he had an unusual condition: He didn’t
want
Gerald W. Bracey,
who taught part time at the university,
in the audience.Finn, president of the
Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, is an
outspoken defender of many Republican ideas
about education reform. Bracey, author of
numerous books and articles, is an outspoken
critic of many of the policies Finn
defends.The university went along with
Finn’s request, and asked Bracey to stay
away from the lecture. This two-year-old
dispute surfaced this week on the Web site
of The Washington Post, where columnist Jay
Matthews
wrote about it
— and about how the university has decided
not to renew Bracey’s contract.
Scott Jaschik, "Kept Out — of a Lecture and
a Position," Inside Higher Ed, April
28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/28/bracey
Impure Literature
Drawing on interviews with workers
in Chicago and his own covert explorations of the city’s
meat-processing factories,
Sinclair intended the novel to be an
expose of brutal working conditions. By the time it appeared
as a book the following year, The Jungle’s nauseating
revelations were the catalyst for a reform movement
culminating in the Pure Food and Drug Act. In portraying the
life and struggles of Jurgis Rudkus, a Lithuanian immigrant,
Sinclair wanted to write (as he put it), “The Uncle Tom’s
Cabin of wage slavery,” thereby ushering in an age of
proletarian emancipation. Instead, he obliged the
bourgeoisie to regulate itself — if only to keep from
feeling disgust at its breakfast sausages.
Scott McLemee, "Impure Literature," Inside Higher Ed,
April 29, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/28/mclemee
It's easy to start your own blog. Next you might want
to start an RSS.
Bob Jensen's threads on Weblogs and blogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
There are many other alternatives for setting up a free
blog. See the above link for more options.
The innovation that sends blogs
zinging into the mainstream is
RSS, or Really Simple Syndication. Five years
ago, a blogger named Dave Winer, working with software
originally developed by Netscape, created an easy-to-use
system to turn blogs, or even specific postings, into Web
feeds. With this system, a user could subscribe to certain
blogs, or to key words, and then have all the relevant items
land at a single destination. These personalized Web pages
bring together the music and video the user signs up for, in
addition to news. They're called "aggregators." For now,
only about 5% of Internet users have set them up. But that
number's sure to rise as Yahoo and Microsoft plug them.
Business Week, April 22, 2005 --- ,
http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/blogspotting/
"What Your College Kid Is Really Up To," by Steven Levy,
Time Magazine, December 13, 2004, Page 12
Aaron Swartz was nervous when
I went to interview him. I know this is not because he told
me, but because he said so on his student blog a few days
afterward. Swartz is one of millions of people who
mainstream an Internet-based Weblog that allows one to punch
in daily experiences as easily as banging out diary entries
with a word processor. Swartz says the blog is meant to
help him remember his experiences during an important time
for him --- freshman year at Stanford. But this opens up a
window to the rest of us.
Continued in the article.
See
http://www.aaronsw.com/
Two paragraphs written by Aaron Swartz at Stanford
University ---
http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/001690
I have taken two IHUM
(Introduction to the HUManities) courses. The first
was a right-wing course in which the TF told us ‘You
might think you found an error in Locke’s logic, but
you should check again, because Locke was a pretty
smart guy.’,
got mad with me for talking about Vietnam,
and suggested I drop out of
school. The message of the course,
I concluded, was ‘the
world is just fine, so we shouldn’t do anything, and
even if we did, it would just make things worse.’
The new IHUM is a left-wing
course in which the TF asks us ‘Do you agree with
Marx? Where was he wrong?’ and got mad at me for
abusing my white male blogger knowledge power to
silence the rest of the class, and suggested I go to
a progressive/radical school. The message of the
course, I conclude, is ‘the world is a terrible
mess, but is so rotten that we can’t do anything,
except maybe by purchasing more
“socially-responsible” items’. (Madison Avenue is
apparently the new Marx — overthrow capitalism
through…more capitalism! (This theme is thoroughly
documented in Thomas Frank’s early work.))
"Controversy at Warp Speed," by Jeffrey Selingo, The
Chronicle of Higher Education, April 29, 2005, Page A27
The deluge of messages left Mr.
Corrigan wondering how so many people had found out
about such a small skirmish on his campus. So his
assistant poked around on the Web and discovered that
six days after the protest, a liberal blog
(http://sf.indymedia.org) run by the San Francisco
Independent Media Center had posted an article headlined
"Defend Free Speech Rights at San Francisco State
University" that included Mr. Corrigan's e-mail address.
It was not the first time that
Mr. Corrigan has been electronically inundated after a
campus incident. Three years ago he received 3,000
e-mail messages after a pro-Israel rally was held at the
university.
EVERYONE HAS A BEEF
Conflicts on campus are nothing
new, of course. But colleges today are no longer viewed
as ivory towers. Institutions of all sizes and types
are under greater scrutiny than ever before from
lawmakers, parents, taxpayers, students, alumni, and
especially political partisans. Empowered by their
position or by the fact that they sign the tuition
checks, they do not hesitate to use any available forum
to complain about what is happening at a particular
institution.
In this Internet age,
information travels quickly and easily, and colleges
have become more transparent, says Collin G. Brooke, an
assistant professor of writing at Syracuse University,
who studies the intersection between rhetoric and
technology. Many universities' Web sites list the
e-mail addresses of every employee, from the president
on down, enabling unencumbered access to all of them.
"That was not possible 10 years
ago," Mr. Brooke says. "Maybe I'd go to a library, find
a college catalog, and get an address. Then I'd have to
write a letter. Now it's easy to whip off a couple of
sentences in an e-mail when it takes only a few seconds
to find that person's address."
Read more about blogs and Weblogs and RSS at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
That's Enron-tainment: Positive review on the new
Enron movie
Alex Gibney's freewheeling -- and
terrifically entertaining -- documentary, newly entered into
national release, puts faces and voices to the men and women
who've become household names since the scandal broke four
years ago. Some of these former executives have already
enjoyed (or endured) extensive face time on TV. But now
they're characters in the context of a film that's been
adapted from the book of the same name by Bethany McLean and
Peter Elkind, and the big screen lends new immediacy to
their appearance. That's not to say Mr. Gibney's documentary
turns its characters into real people. Given the scale of
the human and economic damage, of the deception and very
possibly the pathological self-deception, there may not be
any real people behind those scrupulously straight faces.
Still, "The Smartest Guys in the Room" gives us the same
sort of perverse pleasure that's been a staple of "60
Minutes" over the years -- watching world-class crooks tell
world-class lies.
"That's Enron-tainment: Company's Chief Cheats Give
'Smartest Guys' Energy: Documentary Tracing Firm's Fall Is
Provocative, Proudly Partisan; 'Machuca': Classy Class
Drama," The Wall Street Journal, April 29, 2005; Page
W1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111473473039520299,00.html?mod=todays_us_weekend_journal
Bob Jensen's threads on the history of the Enron/Andersen
scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm
You can download Enron's Infamous Home Video
Although it has nothing to do with the above professional
movie, Jim Borden sent me a copy of the amateur video
recording of Rich Kinder's departure from Enron (Kinder
preceded Skilling as President of Enron). This video
features nearly half an hour of absurd skits, songs and
testimonials by company executives. It features CEO Jeff
Skilling proposing Hypothetical
Future Value (HPV) accounting with in retrospect
is too true to be funny during the subsequent melt down of
Enron. George W. Bush (then Texas Governor Bush and his
father) appear in the video. You can download parts of it
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#HFV
Warning: The above video is in avi format and takes a
very long time to download. It probably dovetails nicely
into Alex Gibney's new Hollywood movie.
Footnote: Rich Kinder left Enron, formed his own energy
company, and became a billionaire ---
http://www.mcdep.com/MR11231.PDF
Internet is newest place to plead case
Defendants in high-profile criminal
and civil cases are increasingly using the Internet in an
attempt to influence the public, the media and even
potential jurors. From simple discussion groups to
ultra-slick multimedia shows, the sites are giving
unprecedented message control to those who stand to lose
their fortune or freedom. "Is it a trend? Absolutely," said
Richard Levick, a Washington-based litigation consultant who
has designed Web strategies for his clients. "We're going to
see a lot more of this into the future. Defendants are going
to demand it." An Illinois capital case spawned one of the
first sites 10 years ago. Lawyers for Girvies Davis, who
said he did not commit the 1978 murder that put him on Death
Row, built a home page in 1994 to publicize his plea for
mercy. It attracted enormous attention. Media outlets from
ABC News to People magazine ran stories on Davis, and Brian
Murphy, one of the defense attorneys, said Web surfers sent
a deluge of e-mails to then-Gov. Jim Edgar. "I don't have
any idea whether it had any effect at all, but we didn't get
the outcome we were looking for. Girvies was executed on May
17, 1995," said David Schwartz, who also represented Davis.
John Keilman, "Internet is newest place to plead case,"
Chicago Tribune, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.chicagotribune.com/technology/chi-0504250225apr25,1,3303011.story?coll=chi-techtopheds-hed
Jensen Comment: I wonder if we will one day see an
explosion of Web sites protesting grades in college, sites
that name names, show instructor comments (or lack thereof)
on term papers, etc.
Amazon may not be the place to plead your case
Several months ago, Christy
Serrato bought a iPod mini digital-music player through
Amazon.com Inc.'s Web site. When it failed to arrive, she
sent a number of e-mails to the seller, without a reply.
Only after another round of e-mails did she finally get a
refund, roughly two months after her purchase. The challenge
for Ms. Serrato, a software saleswoman in San Francisco, was
that, while she used Amazon's Web site -- the seller was
actually one of the 925,000 independent merchants that sell
through Amazon. When one of these purchases goes awry,
consumers aren't always sure who is responsible, or even
where to complain.
Mylene Mangalindan, "Who's Selling What on Amazon: Some
Shoppers Are Confused As Independent Merchants Make Up More
of Site's Sales," The Wall Street Journal, April 28,
2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111464129681318824,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Bob Jensen's fraud updates are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Teenagers are not, in fact, superior Web geniuses
"Teenagers are not, in fact,
superior Web geniuses who can use anything a site throws at
them," the study concludes. Rather, there are "cognitive,
developmental and behavioral differences" between adults and
teenagers, which the report defines as people between the
ages of 13 and 17. And those differences make teens less
than expert when it comes to effective Web surfing. For Web
retailers, the study -- which is far from definitive --
suggests some rethinking may be in order. It indicates that
many Web sites are either shooting over the heads of their
intended teen targets or just aren't designed to suit
teenage tastes -- with complex navigation tools,
hard-to-find instructions and search options, and visually
boring sites.
Jeanette Borzo, "Teens Don't Know Everything," The Wall
Street Journal, April 25, 2005; Page R9 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111401164267912052,00.html?mod=todays_us_the_journal_report
I guess they just wanted to borrow the stuff for one
night
A television, stereo, and VCR
were stolen over the weekend from a house in the small town
of Kremlin. Undersheriff Jerry Niles said the woman who
lives at the house called deputies Monday night to say that
someone broke into her house again while she was away,
returned the electronics gear, even restoring the wiring and
repairing a door jamb damaged in the original break-in. "It
was spooky," Niles said. He said it was the first time he
has ever seen all of the property taken in a burglary
returned like that. Deputies are still investigating the
case.
"Burglar With Conscience Returns Items,"
Newsday.com, April 28, 2005
---
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-burglar-returns,0,1996502.story
Women on the endangered species list?
Never mind the spotted owl. A
new study suggests that pollution could hasten the demise of
a species much dearer to man: women. Swedish fishermen who
were exposed to high levels of industrial waste, pesticides
and other pollutants had a higher proportion of male Y
chromosomes in their sperm, scientists said. Why is that
worrisome? Because an egg fertilized by a Y chromosome sperm
will produce a boy while an X chromosome sperm results in a
girl. And there are already 33 million more men than women
in the world, according to the Population Reference Bureau.
"The more exposed the fishermen were to the chemicals, the
more Y chromosomes we found," Prof. Aleksander Giwercman of
Malmo University in Sweden told Reuters. The study focused
on dangerous pollutants such as dioxin, DDT and PCBs used
commercially for decades before being banned. "This is more
evidence that chemicals which everyone is exposed to have an
effect on the function of the reproductive system,"
Giwercman said.
Corky Siemaszko, "Dirty genes, fewer gals?" New York
Daily News, April 28, 2005 ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/wn_report/story/304476p-260580c.html
Walt Mossberg's Mailbox, April 28, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111463925099218775,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Q: I am a broker who sells land
in rural or remote locations. Increasingly, my clients
want high-speed DSL or cable Internet services, but they
are often unavailable in the rural areas. Are there
rural options available?
A: Yes. You can tell them that,
in most places, high-speed Internet service is available
via satellite. DirecTV offers a service called Direcway,
which works anywhere with a clear view of the Southern
sky. It downloads data at 500 kilobits per second, which
is equivalent to the slower DSL offerings.
It's been years since I tested
satellite Internet service, so I can't offer an
evaluation. But the Direcway service has some drawbacks.
It doesn't work well with fast Internet gaming, because
there is some latency in the home-to-satellite
connection. It also isn't compatible with most Virtual
Private Network, or VPN, connections that link homes
securely to corporate networks. And its upload speed is
quite slow, at just 50 kbps.
Also, Direcway is relatively
costly. There's a $600 upfront cost for a special
satellite dish, and the monthly fee is $60, much more
than most DSL and cable rates. But, in areas without DSL
or cable, it may be worth it.
Jensen Comment: The satellite solution is not ideal.
Note the upload problem mentioned above (upload means the
things like messages and files that you send someplace
else).
Fake-Drug Sales Thrive on Web
Drug-industry executives think the
Internet and mail-order operations will be the biggest
source of counterfeit drugs over the next five years,
according to a report released today by Ernst & Young. Of
the executives surveyed, 43% identified illegal Internet and
mail-order pharmacies as the growing threat, while 35%
identified the secondary wholesale market. That is a shift;
the secondary market is currently the biggest entry point,
according to 41% of those polled.
Heather Won Tesoriero, "Fake-Drug Sales Thrive on Web,"
The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111465461647719182,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Trivia from the Washington Post on April 26
Which Middle Eastern country
recently announced that all camel racers will be mechanical
by 2007?
A.
Oman
B.
Qatar
C.
Saudi Arabia
D.
United Arab Emirates
Grossly exaggerated and fabricated (obesity) scare
campaign
With tremendous media fanfare last
year, Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, and Health and Human Services
Secretary Tommy Thompson announced that overweight and
obesity had killed 400,000 Americans in 2000. The CDC paper
making this claim, led by Gerberding and published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association, laid the
foundation for billions of dollars in government and
industry initiatives and an aggressive new national
advertising campaign to combat what she called a "tragic and
unacceptable" health crisis. But it has finally been exposed
for what it is: a grossly exaggerated and fabricated scare
campaign
(
http://snipurl.com/TooFat ).
Sandy Scwarz, "Bon Appetit! ," Tech Central Station,
April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.techcentralstation.com/042505D.html
Sounds a bit too much like putting human rubbish in
rubbish containers in a dump
Government and opposition MPs
are teaming up in a joint plan to house anti-social tenants
in special iron huts to reduce city disputes and prevent
people from being forced onto the street. The plan from the
Christian Democrat CDA, Liberal VVD and opposition Labour
PvdA is focused at troublesome tenants who have long been a
nuisance factor. Instead of being evicted, they will be
given a 'last chance residence', newspaper 'De Telegraaf'
reported on Monday. Christian Democrat MP Mirjam Sterk wants
to prevent tenants who disturb their neighbourhood ending up
on the street. She said: "The trouble will only have been
relocated, not resolved". The CDA is being inundated with
complaints about troublesome neighbours and Sterk believes
that between "the normal house" and "the street", a
transitional home is missing. The party will submit a
legislative proposal to Parliament allowing the relocation
of anti-social neighbours to container homes in a
specifically designated and remote area of a city.
"Anti-social tenants face life in 'container homes',"
Expatica, April 25, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/HumanTrashCans
Quantum Computing May Seem Too Far Out, But Don't
Count on It
Science, including the science of
building computers, often works in three phases. First, a
scientist has an idea that other scientists regard as more
science fiction than science. A few years later, a few other
scientists begin to realize that the idea isn't so
improbable after all. And a few years after that, the idea
starts to be taught to undergraduates as though it is old
hat. That's what's happening with quantum computing, a
radical redesign of computers that could result in
unimaginably fast machines. A generation ago, a few
physicists had the brainstorm that such machines might be
possible -- even though Albert Einstein himself regarded it
all as nonsense. Now, at the University of California,
Berkeley, you have C191: Quantum Information Science and
Technology, a senior-level class that's a co-production of
the school's physics, chemistry and computer-science
departments.
"Quantum Computing May Seem Too Far Out, But Don't Count on
It," The Wall Street Journal, April 25, 2005; Page B1
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111437977771115415,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Feedback
This concept, which arose from the
early days of electronics, has become one of the most
powerful in engineering and applied science. Anyone who
wishes to evaluate some of the claims made by people like
computer modellers needs to appreciate the basics of
feedback. While you need complex numbers to understand it
fully, the basic concepts can be illustrated by means of the
simple feedback equation as developed for early electronic
amplifiers
John Brignell,
"Feedback," Number Watch ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/feedback.htm
ROTC down 16%
Enrollments in the
Army’s Reserve Officers Training Corps have
dropped 16 percent in the last two years,
according to a
report in The
Washington Post (free registration
required). The Post reported that some ROTC
units have seen more than 80 percent of
recent graduates assigned to fighting roles
in Afghanistan or Iraq.
Inside Higher Ed, April 25, 2005http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/25/qt
A broken wrist cost more than $US17,000 to fix in the
US, where Mark Coultan discovered bulk billing had an
altogether different meaning.
The economist Paul Krugman has
summarised it this way: "The United States has the most
privatised, competitive health system in the advanced world;
it also has by far the highest costs, and close to the worst
results."
"Small bump, big bill," Sydney Morning Herald, April
25 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/24/1114281452417.html
It's not a tunnel of love: Trap-building ants torture
prey
A fierce species of Amazonian ant
has been seen building elaborate traps on which hapless prey
are stretched like medieval torture victims, before being
slowly hacked to pieces. With cunning and patience,
Allomerus decemarticulatus worker-ants cut hairs from the
stem of the plant they inhabit, and use the tiny fibres to
build a spongy snare, Nature magazine reports. This
ingenious feat of engineering has only ever been observed in
one other species of related ant, French researchers say.
What the ants do is cut hairs to clear a path under the
plant stem, while leaving some hairs standing to form
"pillars" on top of which the lethal platform will sit.
Using the plant hairs they have harvested, the ants weave
the platform itself, which is bound together and
strengthened using a special fungus. When the ants have
completed the chamber they puncture holes all along its
surface, each just big enough to poke their heads through.
Then, hundreds of worker ants climb into the chamber and
wait for an unfortunate victim.
"Trap-building ants torture prey," BBC News, April
23, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4472521.stm
Why you should zero out your credit card debt and pay
cards off in full every month thereafter
But all is not tulips and nectar
over at MBNA, the largest independent issuer of credit
cards. Yesterday it reported a poor quarter and ratcheted
down earnings expectations for the year. Its stock sank to a
two-year low. Credit card giant Capital One Financial had a
better quarter, but its stock has been slumping lately, too.
Bad news for the credit card companies may be better news
for us. There are signs at both companies that consumers may
be responding to higher rates by doing something almost
completely unexpected and practically un-American: paying
down credit card debt.The credit card industry presumes,
based on happy experience, that Americans will borrow more
money each quarter to support their spending habits,
regardless of the direction of interest rates, and that
enough consumers will be happy simply to pay off just enough
debt to allow them to borrow more. But last quarter MBNA, to
its apparent shock, found that "results were further
impacted by unexpectedly high payment volumes from U.S.
credit card customers," and that "the payment volumes were
particularly higher on accounts with higher interest rates."
Daniel Gross, "Americans Pay Off Credit Card Debt! This is
not science fiction. It's really happening," Slate,
April 22, 2005 ---
http://www.slate.com/id/2117224/
Upwardly mobile gay college president
A Berkeley dean talks about taking
Hampshire’s top job, politically active campuses, and
becoming one of the few openly gay college presidents
Scott Jaschik, "Upwardly Mobile Academic: Ralph J. Hexter,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 18, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/04/18/hexter
Jensen Comment: Dr. Hexter's Website is at
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~hexter/
I guess I had somewhat similar experiences when moving
from a large state university to Trinity University
All people, not just other
psychologists. Everyone has a unique perspective of the
world. My non-psychology friends introduced me to new ideas
to explore; ideas that came from the view of the world they
received through the window of their disciplines. I was at
once stimulated intellectually and humbled. I was reminded
that a true understanding of people entails far more than
what we learn from research only in psychology. So, what is
it like teaching in a small liberal arts college? Well, I
guess there ain’t nothin’ else like it in the world, and I,
for one, am happy to have spent over 25 years doing it.
Hank Cetola ,"From Specialist to Generalist," Inside
Higher Ed, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/04/11/cetola
Cut out the middleman: Be your own publisher
When Amy Fisher finished writing her
memoir about shooting her lover's wife, she told her agent
not to send the manuscript to New York publishers. Instead,
Fisher, who made headlines in 1992 as the 17-year-old ''Long
Island Lolita,'' turned to iUniverse in Lincoln, Neb. The
company charges authors several hundred dollars to convert a
manuscript into a book and make it available for sale
online.
Sarah Glazer, "How to Be Your Own Publisher," The New
York Times, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/books/review/24GLAZERL.html
iUniverse ---
http://www.iuniverse.com/
iUniverse, the leading online
book publisher, offers the most comprehensive book
publishing services in the self-publishing
industry—awarded the Editor's Choice award by PC
Magazine and chosen by thousands of satisfied authors as
the leading print-on-demand book publisher.
We help authors to prepare a
manuscript, design and self-publish a book of
professional quality, publicize and market their book,
and print copies of their book for sale online and in
bookstores around the world.
As an innovative book
publisher, we also offer exclusive services such as our
acclaimed Editorial Review and our revolutionary Star
Program, designed to discover and nurture exceptional
new talent within our growing author community.
Don't wait any longer to get
that manuscript off your desk and into the marketplace.
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published author in a matter of weeks. Why not get
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Jensen Comment: What I would do is carefully investigate
the claim of "helping to market your book." Marketing takes
money, sometimes lots of it. Some publishing companies
spend lots of money and have established distribution
channels. Advertising is very expensive. Why should
someone else want to invest heavily in you new book?
The Charitable Foundation Scam
Donors get those perks because they
agree to relinquish control over the money. But since they
appoint the organization's board, they can retain a great
deal of influence over it. Regulators and lawmakers suspect
that many wealthy people have used these organizations more
for tax planning than for any charitable aim and are pushing
for tighter rules as part of a broader crackdown on
charitable tax exemptions. "I'm deeply disturbed that with a
good number of supporting organizations, people are taking
multimillion-dollar tax deductions for what they claim are
contributions to charity, yet too often the result is a
thimbleful of benefit to charity," said Senator Charles E.
Grassley, the Iowa Republican who is chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee.
Stephanie Strom, "A Tax Benefit for Big Donors Often
Bypasses Idea of Charity," The New York Times, April
25, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/25/business/25taxes.html?
Bob Jensen's threads on charity frauds are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#CharityFrauds
Al-Qaeda launched its first Kurdish website
The al-Qaeda terrorist group, led
by the notorious Jordanian leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
launched its first Kurdish website on Tuesday. The new
website - known as Pegy Jehad or live Jihad - contains a
Fatwah with up-to-date news on terrorist activities in Iraq.
The homepage also contains anti-Shiite banners and a
photograph of Baghdad's former governor Paul Bremer
embracing a leading Shiite cleric while standing next to the
American US secretary of State Colin Powell. Users of the
website have the opportunity to send and receive news
through a series of email addresses opened through the
hotmail internet email provider. Pegy Jihad is al-Qaeda's
first website in Kurdish. Previously, the propagation of
Kurdish documents and recordings was left to a group known
as Ansar al-Sunna, which mainly operates in Kurdistan. The
organisation is an outshoot of Ansar al-Islam, a group with
ties to Iran and whose administration officials have links
to al-Qaeda. Ansar al-Sunna began in September 2001 and came
from the unification of several Islamist groups originating
from the mountains of northern Iraq on the Iranian border.
In March 2003, US special forces attacked and scattered most
of the Ansar al-Sunna fighters. The group is responsible for
the many attacks against the Kurdish political parties.
ADNKI, April 26, 2005 ---
http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level.php?cat=Terrorism&loid=8.0.157386006&par=0
While Wal-Mart has won on Main Street,
it's been the loser on Wall Street
But while Wal-Mart has won on Main
Street, it's been the loser on Wall Street. Over the past
year, its shares have fallen 19%. An owner of Kmart stock,
which began trading as Sears Holdings in March, is more than
200% ahead. Wal-Mart trades at 20 times its earnings last
year. Based on Lehman Brothers estimates, Sears Holding
trades at a steeper price-to-earnings ratio of 27.
"Wall and Main," The Wall Street Journal, April 29,
2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111473424232420292,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
I know that I have mentioned that Wikipedia is a great free
knowledge sharing service, a free and interactive online
Encyclopedia. I would like you to think of ways you can
quickly add to (or edit) modules instantaneously from your
browser.
History on
One-Room Schools ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-room_school
History of the Farm ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farm
History of Chemistry ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemistry
History of Philosophy ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy
History of Psychology ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology
History of Accounting ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounting
Wikipedia is a great online free
Encyclopedia ---
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
Note that you can instantaneously edit virtually any module
such as History of the Farm. Simply click on the tab "Edit
this Page." Text is changed easily, but there is a bit of
syntax to learn for some items. You can also insert links
to other Web sites relevant to the topic.
. I suggest you look up knowledge topics of special
interest to you and think about ways that you can almost
effortlessly improve the modules.
For example, in about a minute I added a
link to my site at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accounting#External_links
Move over boys, the money is on the women
At present, women millionaires
(in the U.K.) between
the ages of 18 and 44 and over 65 outnumber male
millionaires, the report says. They own 48 per cent of the
nation's personal wealth. But significant change will occur
as a result of the rise in "financially sophisticated
younger women", who will swell the numbers of those who
inherit their wealth.
Sarah Womack, "Move over boys, the money is on the women,"
The Age, April 23, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/WomenMillionaires
Is there a real Super Woman with X-Ray vision?
Previous tests in London and
New York led to mixed results. British scientists were
convinced but there was doubt in the US where she could only
determine the illnesses of four out of seven people. The
latest experiments were carried out by Professor Yoshio
Machi at Tokyo University, who specialises in studying
apparent superpowers in human beings. Professor Machi said:
"We did a whole range of tests, and the strangest thing was
that we found she could also use her abilities on
photographs, even on tiny passport photos. "She was able to
look at them and apparently see what the problem was. Her
ability is not x-ray vision, but she definitely has some
kind of talent that we can't explain yet."
"X-ray vision girl amazes scientist," Ananova ---
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1370018.html
One nation under your belief system: Shouldn't "your"
be "any" or "my?"
The students in Vincent Pulciani's
seventh-grade class were reciting the Pledge of Allegiance
this week when they heard the voice over the intercom say
something they'd never heard before, at least not during the
Pledge. Instead of "one nation, under God," the voice said,
"one nation, under your belief system." The bewildered
students at Everitt Middle School in Wheat Ridge never even
got to "indivisible," according to Vincent's mother,
Christina Pulciani-Johnson.
Valerie Richardson, "Altered Pledge of Allegiance stuns
students," Washington Times, April 23, 2005 ---
http://washingtontimes.com/national/20050422-111131-2272r.htm
New labor union disclosure form (LM-2
)is an eye opener
The rank and file are also
beginning to see a precise breakdown of how their money is
spent. Prior to the new form, unions could lump millions
into vague categories such as "overhead," or the
ever-favorite "other disbursements." Unions must now account
for dollars spent on anything from the grievance process to
organizing to politics. This will help to keep leaders
accountable and perhaps reduce such fraud as the officials
of a Washington, D.C., teachers union who apparently bought
mink coats and alligator shoes with dues money. The forms
will also shine a light on one of labor's darkest, dampest,
corners: trusts. These affiliates are barely regulated slush
funds into which unions funnel dues and then spend at will.
The Detroit Free Press ran articles in 2001 detailing three
such funds that the United Auto Workers ostensibly set up to
finance worker training but in fact were also used by the
top brass to sponsor Nascar racing, host political parties
and underwrite trips to Palm Springs. Under the new rules,
unions will have to account for this trust spending.
"Big Labor's Secrets," The Wall Street Journal, April
25, 2005; Page A14 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111438772677015598,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Ancient Egypt corpses unearthed
Archaeologists digging in a
5600-year-old funeral site in southern Egypt have unearthed
seven corpses thought to date to the era, as well as an
intact figure of a cow's head carved from flint . . . The
find is significant because little is known about the early
phase of Predynastic period. That era predates the
unification of upper and lower Egypt that triggered the
well-known Dynastic era, when ancient Egypt's pharaohs
ruled.
"Ancient Egypt corpses unearthed," Aljazeera, April
20, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0910E89E-D101-4A85-9ED8-DF6029EAB8DC.htm
SWAT Monkey: Animal rights activists aren't going to
like this way of saving police lives
Major city police departments in
the US use paramilitary Swat teams for hostage situations
and in situations involving heavily armed criminals.
Truelove told local newspapers the idea came to him in a
dream about 18 months ago. The test monkey could be trained
to unlock doors and search buildings for police on command,
Truelove said. The capuchin monkey is considered one of the
smartest primates, known by many for its decades-long
association with organ grinders. A capuchin monkey weighs
1.3 to 3.5kg and lives 15 to 20 years.
"Monkeys to join police Swat teams?" Aljazeera, April
19, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8F7ED36E-AEC7-44A8-85BF-E70E6070F4B1.htm
Myths versus facts about the No Child Left Behind law
There are two things wrong with the
NEA's claim that NCLB is an unfunded mandate: The law is
neither a mandate, nor is it unfunded. The nonpartisan
General Accounting Office dismissed the mandate claim last
October. The law only provides funds to those states that
wish to receive them. Any state that wants to reject the
dollars -- and the rules that accompany them -- is free to
do so. That no state has yet taken this route provides an
on-the-ground basis for rejecting the complaint out of hand.
As for funding, the law does contain this clause: "Nothing
in this Act shall be construed to . . . mandate a State or
any subdivision thereof to spend any funds or incur any
costs not paid for under this Act." Placing this clause at
the heart of its complaint, the NEA offers up three
arguments. The silliest says congressional appropriations
fall short of amounts authorized. Never mind that federal
aid to education reached a historic high in 2005, when
spending reached $12.7 billion. That number, says the NEA,
still falls short of the $20.5 billion that had been
authorized in 2002. This misleading argument attempts to
turn a ceiling into a floor, an architectural feat that
would leave no room for congressional discretion. As all
lawmakers and union leaders well know, congressional
authorizations limit -- they do not compel -- expenditure.
Neither Johnson, nor Carter, nor Clinton, to say nothing of
Reagan, signed education appropriation bills that reached
their authorized limit. Indeed, virtually every federal
program is funded below its authorized level. Were the
courts to accept the NEA claim and compel all appropriations
to equal authorized limits, the federal deficit would
immediately balloon to levels beyond the wildest imagination
of the most unabashed Keynesian.
Martin R. West and Paul E. Peterson, "Sue First, Teach
Later," The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2005; Page
A18 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111465878943419249,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Ayn Rand at 100: "Yours Is the Glory
This year marks the 100th
anniversary of the birth of Alissa Rosenbaum, who won renown
and the affection of millions under her chosen identity of
Ayn Rand. When Jerome Tuccille wrote his semi fictional
odyssey of a libertarian activist from the 1950s to the
early 1970s, his title seemed inevitable: It Usually Begins
with Ayn Rand. Rand was the most popular and influential
libertarian figure of the twentieth century. But what is
most enduringly important about her is not necessarily her
explicitly political and economic philosophy. She was born
February 2, 1905, in St. Petersburg, Russia, the daughter of
a shop-owning chemist. When the Soviets took over, the shop
was taken from him. Her family's (and nation's) privations
and struggles with communism informed her first novel, We
the Living (1936). In that book's indomitable heroine, Kira
Argouvna, it is easy to see the reflected light of Alissa,
another young girl, Soviet by cruel fate but not spirit,
with little to motivate her but the desire to escape. Kira's
desire ended in tragedy; Rand's in triumph.
Brian Doherty , "Ayn Rand at 100: "Yours Is the Glory"
Cato Institute, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.cato.org/research/articles/doherty-050405.html
Academic feminists war on RAP
The third obstacle is academic
feminism. At the University of Chicago conference, "Feminism
and Hip Hop," the focus was on "crunk," the Atlanta-based
style of rap that casts black men as pimps and black women
as strippers and "ho's." Some speakers -- notably Ms. Bailey
from Spelman and Joan Moore from Essence -- used the
language of morality when describing how crunk degrades
women. But when the academic feminists weighed in, moral
revulsion got bracketed as naive, and we groundlings were
instructed to view "Tip Drill" as part of a "hegemonic
intertextuality" in which "the structures of racism,
patriarchy, heterosexism and advanced consumer capitalism"
are "embedded" or "inscribed" (I forget which).
Martha Bayles, "Attacks on Rap Now Come From Within," The
Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2005; Page D8 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111464272332918867,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
"Are We Just Really Smart Robots? Two books on the mind
put the human back into human beings," by Kenneth Silber,
Reason On Line, April 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/0504/cr.ks.are.shtml
On Intelligence, by Jeff Hawkins with Sandra
Blakeslee, New York: Times Books, 261 pages, $25
Mind: A Brief Introduction, by John R. Searle,
New York: Oxford University Press, 326 pages, $26
Neurobiology’s advances
generate anxiety as well as joy and hope. On the joyful
and hopeful side, there are the prospect and reality of
improved treatments for brain diseases and debilities.
But anxiety arises over what the science tells us, or
will tell us, about ourselves. Thoughts and feelings may
be reduced to brain structures and processes.
Consciousness and free will may be proven unimportant or
illusory. Much of what we value about ourselves, in
short, may be explained—or, worse, explained away.
The prevailing trends in the
philosophy of mind reinforce such concerns. The field is
dominated by schools of materialism that describe mental
phenomena as types or side products of physical
phenomena. Mind-body dualism, which posits a separate
existence for the mind, has been effectively eclipsed
(although it seems to receive continued implicit
acceptance from many nonexperts). Some forms of
materialism argue that the mental phenomena in question
do not even exist.
Continued in the article
Most likely the last gun shop in Minneapolis will be
put out of business
Koscielski initially opened a store
in 1995, days before the City Council adopted a moratorium
on gun shops. The city tried to close his shop down, but
federal courts ordered that he be allowed to continue doing
business. As a result, he was given an exemption in the
zoning code. In the summer of 2003, Koscielski's lease at
his first location was terminated. He said he was forced to
rent a site not in compliance with the zoning code, which
requires that gun shops be at least 500 feet from a church,
school, park or library and 250 feet from a residence.
Koscielski's Guns and Ammo at 2926 Chicago Av. S. is not
zoned for a gun shop. Council Member Gary Schiff faults
Koscielski for "blatantly" opening a shop in an area not
zoned for his business. But Koscielski, a disabled veteran,
accuses the city of trying to put him out of business by
leaving him no legal options for a site. "This is my Alamo.
I'm really fighting for my livelihood here," Koscielski
said.
Rochelle Olso, "Last gun shop may be facing final battle,"
Star Tribune, April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.startribune.com/stories/462/5366857.html
Question
Why haven't charities been more active in trying to keep the
Federal estate tax on the books?
Answer:
No one wants to alienate the wealthy donors and board
members who would benefit from a repeal.
Charities stand to lose roughly
$10 billion a year if the federal estate tax is repealed
permanently, according to a study conducted by the Brookings
Institution and the Urban Institute. That is roughly the
equivalent of all the grants made by the country's 82
largest foundations in 2003.
Stephanie Strom, "Charities Are Silent on Loss of Estate
Tax," The New York Times, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/national/24silence.html?
Just let a chameleon crawl across the screen
She (Jane Fonda)
invited her daughter, Vanessa
Vadim, a documentary filmmaker, to help her. ''Why don't you
just get a chameleon and let it crawl across the screen?''
Vanessa suggested dryly.
Maureen Dowd, "'My Life So Far': The Roles of a Lifetime,"
The New York Times, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/books/review/24DOWDL.html
Does virtually every child have a special need,
perhaps a costly special need?
With an estimated 5.7 million
children in the United States qualifying for special
education, similar struggles are playing out around the
country. Federal laws aimed at protecting the disabled
entitle those who qualify to a free and "appropriate"
education tailored to their needs. But the definition of
"appropriate" differs from town to town, leaving much to
quarrel about. The battle is particularly intense in the
suburbs, where wealthy, educated parents no longer see
special education as a stigma or trap. They are pressing
hard for services and accommodations to address their
children's learning needs, from extra time on tests to
tuition for private schools. But many suburban school
districts are aggressively challenging some of the requests
as indulgent interpretations of the law.
Alison Leigh Cowan, "Amid Affluence, a Struggle Over Special
Education," The New York Times, April 24, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/24/education/24westport.html
Just pour in the scotch, I can't afford the water
Perth, like Sydney, is also
experiencing climate change. The city's rainfall has fallen
almost 20 per cent in 25 years. To make up the shortfall,
the region's extensive groundwater catchment is being
depleted at unsustainable rates. This is generally
understood by the public. The State Government is now
committed to building a large desalination plant, a
desperate measure in ecological terms, recognition that
Perth will never again be able to live off the water it
receives naturally.
"Running out of water - and time," Sydney Morning Herald,
April 25, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/24/1114281450815.html
How deep are their pockets?
The Big Four accounting firms --
Deloitte, PricewaterhouseCoopers, KPMG and Ernst & Young --
have long claimed in court cases that their units are
independent and can't be held liable for each other's sins.
U.S. courts to date have backed that argument. The firms say
the distinction is important -- allowing them to boost the
efficiency of the global economy by spreading uniform
standards of accounting around the world, without worrying
that one unit's missteps will sink the entire enterprise.
But Deloitte e-mails seized by Italian prosecutors and
reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, along with documents
filed in the court cases, show how the realities of auditing
global companies increasingly conflict with the legal
contention that an accounting firm's units are separate. The
auditing profession -- which plays a central role in
business by checking up on companies' books -- has become
ever-more global as the firms' clients have expanded around
the world. But that's creating new problems as auditors face
allegations that they bear liability for the wave of
business scandals in recent years.
David Reilly and Alessandra Galloni, "Facing
Lawsuits, Parmalat Auditor Stresses Its Disunity: Deloitte
Presented Global Face, But Says Arms Acted Alone; E-Mail
Trail Between Units: A Liability Threat for Industry,"
The Wall Street Journal, April 28, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111464808089519005,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on Deloitte's legal woes are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#Deloitte
Bob Jensen's threads on the future of auditing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#FutureOfAuditing
KPMG Ousts Executive, Partners; Steps Tied to
Tax-Shelter Scrutiny
Accounting firm KPMG LLP this week
fired a senior executive who had headed its tax-services
division as it promoted tax shelters earlier this decade,
another sign of the pressure KPMG is facing as
law-enforcement officials investigate the now-contentious
sales effort. The New York firm also dismissed two partners
who had sat on its 15-member board, the latest personnel
change tied to the tax-shelter scrutiny. A KPMG spokesman
says the firm doesn't discuss personnel matters. Since
February 2004, KMPG has been under criminal investigation by
the Justice Department's U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan
for its sale of tax shelters in the 1990s and as recently as
2002. KPMG's marketing effort was publicized in hearings in
2003 by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations,
which concluded in a report that KPMG had been an "active
and, at times, aggressive" promoter of tax shelters to
individuals and corporations that were later determined by
the Internal Revenue Service to be potentially abusive or
illegal tax shelters.
Diya Guollapalli, "KPMG Ousts Executive, Partners; Steps
Tied to Tax-Shelter Scrutiny," The Wall Street Journal,
April 28, 2005; Page C2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111465047380019062,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Bob Jensen's threads on KPMG's abusive tax shelters that
exceeded $1 billion in revenue to the firm are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#KPMG
UN policy reversal by President Bush in his second
term
Significant differences between the
first and second Bush terms continue to emerge. After
studied silence in her White House years, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice is beginning to reveal her style and
values, clearly with presidential approval. She seems to be
a pragmatic conservative, oriented toward problem-solving,
pursuing essentially non-ideological policies. She is
careful (and politically smart) to keep faith, in all her
statements, with neoconservative values, but she is also
finding high-profile, low-cost ways, such as extensive
travel, to improve America's shaky image and relationships
around the world. Several recent events are worth attention
. . . The dramatic policy reversal -- personally shaped by
President Bush -- resulting in a decision not to veto a U.N.
Security Council resolution authorizing a role for the
International Criminal Court in Darfur. This was the first
time in four years that the Bush administration had departed
from its practice of opposing anything having to do with the
ICC.
Richard Holbrooke, "Introducing Condoleezza And a Plan for
Kosovo," The Wall Street Journal, April 25, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111438201022415467,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Diversity under stress
They see it as growing pains in a
college trying to manage all sides of an increasingly
diverse community. "To some degree, this issue may simply
reflect the problems inherent in living in a small fishbowl
together -- one that forces some people with amazing
insensitivity, and maybe a bit of racism, to live together
with others who are extremely sensitive," said Kashif S.
Mansori, a Colby economics professor. "It also seems to have
taken on some life as a symbolic struggle to help figure out
what kind of place Colby is evolving into."
Chuin-Weo Yap, "Diversity under stress," Morning Sentinel,
April 24, 2005 ---
http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/news/local/1557453.shtml
Innate differences between males and females: I
didn't find anything new worth quoting here!
"Profs Spar on ‘Innate Differences’ Psychologists Pinker and
Spelke debate the data behind Summers' comments," by Natalie
I. Sherman, The Crimson, April 25, 2005 ---
http://thecrimson.com/today/article507328.html
Is IT a career path you'd
recommend to a teenager? The average
computer-science or engineering grad will make
$13,000 more than the average marketing major this
year. Yet two-thirds of working IT pros in the 2005
InformationWeek Salary Survey don't consider it as
promising a career path as it used to be. Why so
glum? We all know the legitimate causes for concern.
This is a market being hit with an unprecedented
wave of globalization, and companies, wherever they
can, are moving IT jobs to lower-cost locations. But
a lot of recent data paints a pretty decent picture
of the U.S. IT workplace. IT unemployment is below
4%, and average salaries
(compare your salary here)
have grown almost 6% a year
the past five years--to $71,000 on average for staff
and $95,000 for managers. Looking at these numbers,
I see a career that still holds great promise for
someone with a passion for technology and
engineering. Is that wrong? Would you steer a
teenager away from computer science? Read a more
complete analysis at my
blog and weigh in with
your views. |
I guess this should be forbidden until both are over
65 years old
The Associated Press has this crime
report from Trafford, Ala.:
A brother and sister were arrested on felony incest charges
after the man's wife called sheriff's deputies, who
allegedly caught the siblings having sex. Ronald Stewart
Howze, 44, of Trafford, and Lori Ann Rotton, 41, of Smyrna,
Ga., were arrested around midnight on April 7, said
Jefferson County sheriff's spokesman Randy Christian.
From the Opinion Journal, April 26, 2005
Payola with women instead of money
According to (Apr) 20th issue of
The Epoch Times, Wu Chang-zhen(?), an expert in current
'Marriage Law' of China, announced the statistic that 95% of
communist party officials, whose corruptions were exposed,
had mistresses. In particular, during the investigation of
those involved in 102 corruption scandals in Guangzhou,
Shenzhen, and Zhuhai in 1,999, 100% of them had mistresses,
which was a real shock. Using a pretty woman as a 'bribe'
rather than money is becoming a raging fashion, and
officials believe that the number of mistresses is the
reflection of one's 'clout.'
"95% of Corrupt Officials in China have mistresses," The
Epoch Times, April 20, 2005 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1392023/posts
Great Orators of the Democratic Party
-"One man with courage makes a majority."-- Andrew Jackson
-"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself."-- Franklin
D. Roosevelt
-"The buck stops here."-- Harry S. Truman
-"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can
do for your country."-- John F. Kennedy
Humor
Imagination consoles us for what we are not, humour
for what we are.
Winston Churchill
Forwarded by Paula
While the barber is lathering the man up for his shave, the man expresses to
the barber how he has a hard time getting a close shave on his cheeks.
The barber replies with a solution and pulls a small wooden ball out of this
cabinet drawer. "Place the wooden ball between your cheek and gum on the
right side and you will have a close shave on that side."
The man does this, and the barber shaves the right side of his face.
"Wow," exclaims the man, "that is great!" He puts the ball on the left side
of his mouth, and with muffled voice asks, "Wht happons if I akkidentally
swawo du bawll?"
The barber says, "Just bring it back in a few days like everyone else does who
swallows it."
Forwarded by Paula
A Cajun was stopped by a game warden in South
Louisiana recently with two ice chests of fish, leaving a bayou well known for
its fishing. The game warden asked the man, "Do you have a license to catch
those fish?"
"Naw, ma fren, I ain't got none of dem, no. Dese
here are my pet fish."
"Pet fish?"
"Ya. Avery night I take dese here fish down to
de bayou and let dem swim 'round for a while. Den I whistle and dey jump rat
back inta dis here ice chest and I take dem home."
"That's a bunch of hooey! Fish can't do that!"
The Cajun looked at the game warden for a moment
and then said, "It's de truth ma' fren. I'll show you. It really works."
"Okay, I've GOT to see this!"
The Cajun poured the fish into the bayou and
stood and waited.
After several minutes, the game warden turned to
him and said, "Well?"
"Well, what?" said the Cajun.
"When are you going to call them back?"
"Call who back?"
"The FISH!"
"What fish?"
We in Louisiana may not be as smart as some, but
we aren't as dumb as most.
Forwarded by Vidya
This is just some tongue-in-cheek humour, we all know the reality :-)
“HELP NEEDED ASAP”
Please help!!!! After two long years of being on a waiting list for an
agility dog, we have been notified by the breeder that, at long last, our number
has come up and ...WE ARE HAVING A PUPPY!!!
We must get rid of our children IMMEDIATELY because we just know how time
consuming our new little puppy is going to be and it just wouldn't be fair to
the children. Since our little puppy will be arriving on Monday we MUST place
the children into rescue this weekend! They are described as:
One male - His name is Tommy, Caucasian (English/Irish mix), light blonde
hair, blue eyes. Four years old. Excellent disposition. He doesn't bite.
Temperament tested. Does have problems with peeing directly in the toilet. Has
had Chicken Pox and is current on all shots. Tonsils have already been removed.
Tommy eats everything, is very clean, house trained & gets along well with
others. Does not run with scissors and with a little training he should be able
to read soon.
One female - Her name is Lexie, Caucasian (English/Irish mix), strawberry
blonde hair, green eyes quite freckled. Two years old. Can be surly at times.
Non-biter, thumb sucker. Has been temperament tested but needs a little attitude
adjusting occasionally. She is current on all shots, tonsils out, and is very
healthy & can be affectionate. Gets along well with other little girls & little
boys but does not like to share her toys and therefore would do best in a one
child household. She is a very quick learner and is currently working on her
house training - shouldn't take long at all.
We really do LOVE our children so much and want to do what's right for them;
that is why we contacted a rescue group. But we simply can no longer keep them.
Also, we are afraid that they may hurt our new puppy.
I hope you understand that ours is a UNIQUE situation and we have a real
emergency here!!! They MUST be placed into your rescue by Sunday night at the
latest or we will be forced to drop them off at the orphanage or along some
dark, country road. Our priority now has to be our new puppy.
Forwarded by Paula
A man from Texas, driving a Volkswagen Beetle,
pulls up next to a guy in an Arkansas licensed Rolls Royce at a stop
sign. Their windows are open and he yells at the guy in the Rolls, "Hey, you
got a telephone in that Rolls?"
The guy in the Rolls says, "Yes, of course I
do.."
"I got one too... see?" the Texan says.
"Uh, huh, yes, that's very nice."
"You got a fax machine?" asks the Texan.
"Why, actually, yes, I do."
"I do too! See? It's right here!" brags the
Texan.
The light is just about to turn green and the
guy in the Volkswagen says, "So, do you have a double bed in back
there?"The guy in the Rolls replies,
"NO! Do you?"
"Yep, got my double bed right in back here,"
the Texan replies.
The light turns and the man in the
Volkswagen takes off. Well, the guy in the Rolls is not about to be
one-upped, so he immediately goes to a customizing shop and orders
them to put a double bed in back of his car.
About two weeks later, the job is finally done. He picks up his car
and drives all over town looking for the Volkswagen beetle with the
Texas plates. Finally, he finds it parked alongside the road, so he pulls
his Rolls up next to it.
The windows on the Volkswagen are all fogged
up and he feels somewhat
awkward about it, but he gets out of his newly modified Rolls and taps on
the foggy window of the Volkswagen.
The man in the Volkswagen finally opens the window a crack and peeks out.
The guy with the Rolls says, "Hey, remember me?"
"Yeah, yeah, I remember you," replies the
Texan, "What's up?"
"Check this out...I got a double bed installed in my Rolls.
"The Texan exclaims, "YOU GOT ME OUT OF THE SHOWER TO TELL ME THAT !!!
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
To all you OWLS (Older Wiser Laughing Souls)
Wisdom from Grandpa .
Whether a man winds up with a nest egg, or a goose egg, depends a lot on
the kind of chick he marries.
Trouble in marriage often starts when a man gets so busy earnin' his salt
that he forgets his sugar.
Too many couples marry for better, or for worse, but not for good.
When a man marries a woman, they become one; but the trouble starts when
they try to decide which one.
If a man has enough horse sense to treat his wife like a thoroughbred,
she will never turn into an old nag.
On anniversaries, the wise husband always forgets the past - but never
the present.
A foolish husband says to his wife, "Honey, you stick to the washin',
ironin', cookin' and scrubbin'. No wife of mine is gonna work."
Many girls like to marry a military man - he can cook, sew, and make beds
and is in good health, and he's already used to taking orders.
Eventually you will reach a point when you stop lying about your age and
start bragging about it.
Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not me, I want people to
know "why" I look this way. I've traveled a long way and some of the roads
weren't paved.
How old would you be if you didn't know how old you are?
You know you are getting old, when everything either dries up or leaks.
Old age is when former classmates are so gray and wrinkled and bald, they
don't recognize you.
Subject: The new Ark
In the year 2004, the Lord came unto Noah, who was now living in the
United States, and said, "Once again, the earth has become wicked and
over-populated and I see the end of all flesh before me. Build another Ark
and save two of every living thing along with a few good humans."
He gave Noah the blueprints, saying, "You have six months to build the
ark before I will start the unending rain for 40 days and 40 nights."
Six months later, the Lord looked down and saw Noah weeping in his
yard... but no ark.
"Noah", He roared, "I'm about to start the rain! Where is the Ark?"
"Forgive me, Lord," begged Noah. "But things have changed. I needed a
building permit. I've been arguing with the inspector about the need for a
sprinkler system. My neighbors claim that I've violated the neighborhood
zoning laws by building the Ark in my yard and exceeding the height
limitations. We had to go to the Development Appeal Board for a decision.
Then the Department of Transportation demanded a bond be posted for the
future costs of moving power lines and other overhead obstructions, to clear
the passage for the Ark's move to the sea. I argued that the sea would be
coming to us, but they would hear nothing of it.
Getting the wood was another problem. There's a ban on cutting local
trees in order to save the spotted owl. I tried to convince the
environmentalists that I needed the wood to save the owls. But no go!
When I started gathering the animals, I got sued by an animal rights
group. They insisted that I was confining wild animals against their will.
As well, they argued the accommodation was too restrictive and it was cruel
and inhumane to put so many animals in a confined space.
Then the EPA ruled that I couldn't build the Ark until they'd conducted
an environmental impact study on your proposed flood.
I'm still trying to resolve a complaint with the Human Rights Commission
on how many minorities I'm supposed to hire for my building crew.
Also, the trades unions say I can't use my sons. They insist I have to
hire only Union workers with Ark building experience.
To make matters worse, the IRS seized all my assets, claiming I'm trying
to leave the country illegally with endangered species.
So, forgive me, Lord, but it would take at least ten years for me to
finish this Ark."
Suddenly the skies cleared, the sun began to shine, and a rainbow
stretched across the sky.
Noah looked up in wonder and asked, "You mean, You're not going to
destroy the world?"
"No," said the Lord. "The government beat me to it."
Forwarded by Paula
Mom & Dad decided that the only way to pull off a Sunday afternoon
quickie with their 8 year old son in the apartment was to send him out
on the balcony with a Popsicle and tell him to report on all the
neighborhood activities.
He began his commentary as his parents put
their plan into operation: "There's a car being towed from the parking
lot" he shouted.
A few moments passed. "An ambulance just drove by"
A few moments later, "Looks like the Anderson's have company" he called
out.
"Matt's riding a new bike........ The Coopers are having sex!!"
Startled, Mother and Dad shot up in bed!!!
Dad cautiously asked, "How do you know they are having sex?"
"Jimmy Cooper is standing out on his balcony with a Popsicle."
Forwarded by a Norskie relative
Subject: Those damned Norskies
What we celebrate on March 17th is the commemoration of St. Patrick's
great and noble deed in driving the Norwegians out of Ireland. It seems that
centuries ago many Norwegians came to Ireland to escape the bitterness of
the Norwegian winter. Ireland was having a famine, at the time, and food was
scarce. The Norwegians were eating almost all the fish caught, leaving the
Irish with nothing but potatoes. St. Patrick was fearful that eventually the
Norwegians would even eat the potatoes, and as a matter of fact, they were
using large quantities of potatoes to make lefse. St. Patrick, taking
matters into his hands, like most Irishmen do, decided the Norwegians had to
go. Secretly, he organized the Irish Republican Army to rid Ireland of
Norwegians. Their first attempt failed.
All through Ireland, members of the Irish Army sabotaged power plants, in
hopes that the fish in Norwegian refrigerators would spoil, forcing the
Norwegians to colder climate where their fish would keep. The fish spoiled
all right, but the Norwegians, as everyone know today, thrive on spoiled
fish. The second attempt also met with failure. In hopes of poisoning the
Norwegian intruders, members of the Irish Army went into each Norwegian
cave, in the dead of night, and sprinkled lye on the rotten fish. As
everyone knows, this is how "Lutefisk" was introduced to the Norwegians, and
they thrived on this lye-soaked stinky, spoiled fish. Poor St. Patrick was
at his wits end as to how to get rid of the Norwegians, so he told them to
"Go to hell." Sure enough, it worked. --- All the Norwegians left Ireland
and moved to Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa!!!
Forwarded by Aaron Konstam
Notice from Microsoft:
It has come to our attention that a few copies of the Texas Edition of
Windows 98 may have accidentally been shipped outside of Texas. If you
have one of the Texas Editions you may need some help understanding the
commands.
The Texas Edition may be recognized by looking at the opening screen. It
reads WINDERS 98 with a background picture of the Alamo superimposed on the
Texas flag. It is shipped with a Leann Rimes screen saver.
Also note the "Recycle Bin" is labeled "Outhouse."
"My Computer" is called "This Infernal Contraption."
"Dialup Networking" is called "Good Ol' Boys."
"Control Panel" is known as "the Dashboard."
"Hard Drive" is referred to as "Wheel Drive."
"Floppies" are "Them Little Ol' Plastic Disc Thangs."
Other features: Instead of an "Error Message" you get a "Winder covered with
a garbage bag and duct tape."
Terminology:
OK = ats aww-right.
Cancel = hail no.
Reset = aw shoot.
Yes = shore.
No = Naaaa.
Find = hunt-fer it.
Go to = over yonder.
Back = back yonder.
Help = hep me out here.
Stop = ternit off.
Start = crank it up.
Settings = sittins.
Programs = stuff that does stuff.
Documents = stuff I done done.
Also note that Winders 98 does not recognize capital letters or punctuation
marks. We regret any inconvenience it may have caused if you received a copy
of the Texas Edition. You may return it to Microsoft for a replacement
version.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
The other night I was invited out for a night with "the girls." I told my
husband that I would be home by midnight, "I promise!"
Well, the hours passed and the margaritas went down way too easy. Around
3 a.m., a bit loaded, I headed for home. Just as I got in the door, the
cuckoo clock in the hall started up and cuckooed three times.
Quickly, realizing my husband would probably wake up, I cuckooed another
nine times. I was really proud of myself for coming up with such a
quick-witted solution (even when totally smashed), in order to escape a
possible conflict with him.
The next morning my husband asked me what time I got in, and I told him
Midnight." He didn't seem pissed off at all. Whew! Got away with that one!
Then he said, "We need a new cuckoo clock."
When I asked him why, he said, "Well, last night our clock cuckooed three
times, then said, "Oh shit.", cuckooed four more times, cleared it's throat,
cuckooed another three times, giggled, cuckooed twice more, and then tripped
over the coffee table and farted."
Forwarded by Don Mathis
Forgetfulness
The name of the author is
the first to go
followed obediently by the title, the plot,
the heartbreaking conclusion, the entire novel
which suddenly becomes one you have never read,
never even heard of,
as if, one by one, the
memories you used to harbor
decided to retire to the southern hemisphere of the brain,
to a little fishing village where there are no phones.
Long ago you kissed the
names of the nine Muses goodbye
and watched the quadratic equation pack its bag,
and even now as you memorize the order of the planets,
something else is slipping
away, a state flower perhaps,
the address of an uncle, the capital of
Paraguay.
Whatever it is you are
struggling to remember,
it is not poised on the tip of your tongue,
not even lurking in some obscure corner of your spleen.
It has floated away down a
dark mythological river
whose name begins with an L
as far as you can recall,
well on your own way to oblivion where you will join those
who have even forgotten how to swim and how to ride a bicycle.
No wonder you rise in the
middle of the night
to look up the date of a famous battle in a book on war.
No wonder the moon in the window seems to have drifted
out of a love poem that you used to know by heart.
Billy Collins
DEE'S POTPOURRI OF WEBS (music and variety with no accountancy) ---
http://www.homestead.com/deewebs/index.html
Drag the mouse and make the skeleton dance to the music ---
http://www.chezmaya.com/applet/valentin.htm
Link forwarded by Auntie Bev
And that's the way it was on April 30,
2005 with a little help from my friends.
Fraud Updates ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Facts about the earth in real time ---
http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You
have to scroll down to the titles) ---
http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics ---
http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research Videos from Harvard University ---
http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor
(an absolutely fabulous and totally free newsletter from a very smart
finance professor, Jim Mahar from St. Bonaventure University) ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting
newsletters are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from
TheCycles.com ---
http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com
are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information
Finder ---
http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links ---
http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best
international accounting standards and news Website at
http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor ---
http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to
questions in technology ---
http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works ---
http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style
Hints ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS
Excel, MS Access, and other helper videos are at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying documentation can be found at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on
www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for
a complete list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers
and education technology experts in higher education from around the
country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob)
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax: 210-999-8134 Email:
rjensen@trinity.edu
April 12, 2005
Bob Jensen's New Bookmarks on April 12,
2005
Bob
Jensen at Trinity
University
For earlier
editions of New Bookmarks go to http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
Click here to search Bob Jensen's web site if you have key words
to enter --- Search Site.
For example if you want to know what Jensen
documents have the term "Enron" enter the phrase Jensen AND Enron.
Another search engine that covers Trinity and other universities is at http://www.searchedu.com/.
Facts about the
earth in real time --- http://www.worldometers.info/
Sure wish there'd be a
little good news today. Think it over
http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/Flash/Think_It_Over.swf
Real time meter
of the U.S. cost of the war in Iraq --- http://www.costofwar.com/
For Quotations of the Week go to
Quotations
For Humor of the Week go to
Humor
For Fraud Updates go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
For my Tidbits Directory go to
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbitsDirectory.htm
My communications on "Hypocrisy
in Academia and the Media" --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisy.htm
My
“Evil Empire” essay --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyEvilEmpire.htm
My
unfinished essay on the "Pending Collapse of the United
States" --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/entitlements.htm
This is fun and educational, especially for
children. Try making it a family game and score it in terms of the number of
miles off in your locations of the states. (forwarded by Dick Haar)
How's your geography?
http://www.sheppardsoftware.com/states_experiment_drag-drop_Intermed_State15s_500.html
How do selected hospitals
in your city/region compare (you choose the criteria and the hospitals)?
When I compared San Antonio's
Baptist Health System with the Methodist System, I got some surprising
results.
In
a move to provide clear, unbiased information about the quality of hospital
care, Medicare is launching a Web-based database that consumers can use to
see for themselves how local institutions stack up against each other. The
Web site, Hospital Compare, went live late yesterday, offering data on 17
widely accepted quality measures in treating heart attack, heart failure and
pneumonia. It shows how most of the nation's general hospitals perform
compared with state and national averages, as well as against their peers.
"This is another big step toward supporting and rewarding better quality,
rather than just paying more and supporting more services," says Mark
McClellan, a physician who heads the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which oversees federal health-care programs for seniors and
low-income people. The government "ends up paying more when a patient gets
poor-quality care and is readmitted" to the hospital, he added.
Rhonda L. Rundle, "Medicare Puts Data Comparing Hospitals Onto Public Web
Site," The Wall Street Journal,
April 1, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111231128175394880,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
The Hospital Care comparison site is at
http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/
April 2, 2005 message from Van Johnson
[accvej@langate.gsu.edu]
I use an example close to this in my undergraduate
accounting course which focuses on measurement from a broad perspective
(with accountants having the expertise in measurement). The interesting
thing is what happens when these measures become public. To no ones surprise
the measures begin to be managed if they are perceived to be tied in any way
to rewards prestige, etc. In some cases, the management is desirable, in
other cases it is not.
As an example, Consider the consequences when a
newspaper publishes the success rates of surgeons that perform open heart
surgeries. Other things being equal, surgeons that take on the more risky
patients will have a lower success rate, and will appear lower in the list.
So the incentive created is to turn away the riskier patients and thus
improve the ratings. Clearly, a better measure that is risk adjusted could
remove this incentive, but if the initial measure is not risk adjusted, the
incentive problem is there.
No one is a bad guy in the story. The newspaper (or
in this case the government) is clearly trying to provide useful info to the
public, and the Doctor is reacting rationally to a poorly conceived measure.
Poor measures frequently leave the situation worse off in the short run.
Van Johnson
Georgia State University
"Next-Generation Educational Software: Why We
Need It and a Research Agenda for Getting It," by Andries van Dam, Sascha
Becker, and Rosemary Michelle Simpson, EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40, no. 2
(March/April 2005): 26–43 ---
http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm0521.asp
The dream of universal
access to high-quality, personalized educational content that is available
both synchronously and asynchronously remains unrealized. For more than four
decades, it has been said that information technology would be a key
enabling technology for making this dream a reality by providing the ability
to produce compelling and individualized content, the means for delivering
it, and effective feedback and assessment mechanisms. Although IT has
certainly had some impact, it has become a cliché to note that education is
the last field to take systematic advantage of IT. There have been some
notable successes of innovative software (e.g., the graphing calculator, the
Geometer’s Sketchpad, and the World Wide Web as an information-storage and
-delivery vehicle), but we continue to teach—and students continue to
learn—in ways that are virtually unchanged since the invention of the
blackboard.
There are
many widely accepted reasons for the lack of dramatic
improvement:
- Inadequate investment in
appropriate research and development of authoring
tools and new forms of content
- Inadequate investment in the
creation of new dynamic and interactive content
that takes proper advantage of digital hypermedia and
simulation capabilities (as opposed to repurposed print
content) at all educational levels and across the spectrum
of disciplines
- Inadequate investment in
appropriate IT deployment in schools (e.g.,
although PCs are available in K-12, there are too few of
them, they are underpowered, and they have little content
beyond traditional “drill-and-kill” computer-aided
instruction, or CAI; at the postsecondary level there is
more availability of computers and software, plus routine
use of the Internet, but still a dearth of innovative
content that leverages the power of the medium)
- Inadequate support for teacher
education in IT tools and techniques and for the
incorporation of IT-based content into the curriculum
- The general conservatism
of educational institutions
|
Despite this disappointing
record, we remain optimistic. The dramatic advances in hardware technology,
especially during the last decade, provide extraordinary new capabilities,
and the desire to “do something” to address the need for lifelong, on-demand
learning is finally being widely recognized. The ubiquity and accessibility
of the Internet has given rise to a new kind of learning community and
environment, one that was predicted by Tim Berners-Lee in his 1995 address
to the MIT/Brown Vannevar Bush Symposium1 and that John Seely Brown
elaborated into the rich notion of a learning ecology in his seminal article
“Growing Up Digital: How the Web Changes Work, Education, and the Ways
People Learn.”2 There is great hope that this emergent learning environment
will in time pervade all organizations, binding learners and teachers
together in informal, ever-changing, adaptive learning communities.
Here we will first
recapitulate some well-known technology . . .
Continued in article
March 24, 2005 message from a friend
Bob, have you had a chance to look over the new rules
proposed by NASBA? If so, what is your reaction to these changes?
Wayne
By the way, I will be on partial phased retirement
starting this fall for two years. I will work only the spring semester (15
weeks) for one half salary and full benefits. We just brought a new camper and
plan to do some travel.
March 25, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
I have not studied the latest specific curriculum proposal. I did sit in on
the session in Orlando last August where NASBA presented its preliminary
pending proposal.
My reaction is that NASBA should provide a listing of topical coverage on
the CPA examination. But NASBA should not propose a curriculum or even
courses. What topics are covered in a particular college and how they are
covered is a faculty decision in each individual school. I’m even opposed to
having state boards dictate what courses and how much coverage is required to
sit for the CPA examination (as is the case in Texas). This leads to shopping
for states. For example, one of my masters students in accounting went out to
California and passed all four parts of the examination before even graduating
from our masters program.
My main problem is that the full NASBA curriculum will turn some very good
students away from accounting as a major and attract those students skilled in
memorization of standards. Economics and finance will become much more
attractive to top student not interested in memorizing to pass a certification
examination and a curriculum devoted to this purpose.
I don’t think NASBA has properly considered the difference between states
that require 150 hours versus states like California and New York that only
require four years.
I don’t think NASBA has properly considered the difference between
motivation to learn and rote learning. The best educators motivate to learn
without necessarily covering all the technical details. Some might cover more
details than others, but the requisite is motivation rather than coverage of
every detail.
There is a fear at NASBA that as the CPA exam covers a lower and lower
proportion of the increasing body of standards that students might pass the
exam and, at the same time, be less prepared to hit the ground running when
hired by a CPA firm that does not want to have to fill in the gaps of the
common body of knowledge. The firms are backing this NASBA initiative and are
hiding behind NASBA so as not to make it look like the firms are dictating the
curricula. But in essence they hope to dictate curricula.
Education should be left to educators. Certification examinations should be
left to the profession. NASBA is going too far, because it will now look like
any school that veers from NASBA’s proposed curriculum has an inferior
accounting curriculum. This just is not the case when you factor in motivation
and the importance of learning outside the accounting standards.
I also think this curriculum short changes accounting tracks other than the
CPA track. There are other career tracks. NASBA may find that some colleges
aim that middle finger at NASBA and go their own way in accounting education.
What would be interesting is to see whether the big accounting firms stop
recruiting at Trinity University, UMO, Boston University, or any other school
that has a great track record with those firms and says to hell with the NASBA
curriculum. Somehow I think the firms will hire talent wherever they can find
talent combined with motivation to continue learning accounting outside the
classroom.
Bob Jensen
The NASBA proposed curriculum is outlined at http://snipurl.com/NASBAcurriculum
March 29, 2005 message from Calderon,Thomas G
[tcalder@UAKRON.EDU]
-----Original Message-----
From: Accounting Education using Computers and Multimedia
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2005 7:59 AM
Subject: Re: NASBA's Proposed Curriculum
Bob, Kate, Rohan, and All Other ACEMers:
The Teaching & Curriculum Section of the AAA will
devote a special issue of its newsletter [
http://aaahq.org/TeachCurr/newsletters/index.htm ] to NASBA's proposal.
I would like to invite ACEMers to contribute a short article to this special
issue. The Section will consider for publication articles that favor the
proposal as well as those that oppose it.
The expected publication date is May 16, 2005 and
the deadline for receiving contributions is May 1. Articles should be no
longer than four single-spaced pages. Authors should use the documentation
style required by Issues in Accounting Education.
Send articles to Wendy Tietz (
wtietz@bsa3.kent.edu )
Thomas G. Calderon Chair,
AAA Teaching & Curriculum Section
April 9, 2005 message from Peter Kenyon
[pbk1@HUMBOLDT.EDU]
I think we are ready for DISTANCE professional
development and collegiality. For virtually all the same reasons used to
support distance education, I think DPD is the model for future activity.
Peter Kenyon
April 10, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Peter,
There are many things that can and are being done these days using
technology. I don't see much need for most committees to travel. But much
more happens, or is capable of happening, in a large annual meeting such as
the AAA annual meeting and the region/section meeting. I would be the last
person in the world to recommend doing away with large annual meetings.
Since airline travel is no longer fun, I long for the day when Scottie can
beam us all up.
If there wasn't some value in physical presence, space travel in Star
Trek would've been all unmanned. What a dull show it would've been.
Sure we could watch downloaded video of each plenary session. But the
follow-up sessions would not, in my viewpoint, have the same spontaneity and
possible interactions with scholars who, for one reason or another, are
either tuned out of technology communications or never go beyond lurkerhood.
Besides, if there weren't such meeting opportunities, colleges would
probably eliminate travel budgets, and we would lose the fringe benefit of
having some fun, often family fun, that is partly reimbursed as long as we
combine a bit of work with our pleasure time.
Lastly, being a "presenter" online is not, and will never be the same as,
having a live audience staring you face-to-face. There are all sorts of
non-verbal messages, including snoring if you call that non-verbal.
Bob Jensen
How safe are unlisted phone numbers? New threats to
folks who pay to unlist their phone numbers
In the past five years, what most of us only recently
thought of as ''nobody's business'' has become the big business of everybody's
business. Perhaps you are one of the 30 million Americans who pay for what you
think is an unlisted telephone number to protect your privacy. But when you
order an item using an 800 number, your own number may become fair game for any
retailer who subscribes to one of the booming corporate data-collection
services. In turn, those services may be -- and some have been -- penetrated by
identity thieves. In the past five
years, what most of us only recently thought of as ''nobody's business'' has
become the big business of everybody's business. Perhaps you are one of the 30
million Americans who pay for what you think is an unlisted telephone number to
protect your privacy. But when you order an item using an 800 number, your own
number may become fair game for any retailer who subscribes to one of the
booming corporate data-collection services. In turn, those services may be --
and some have been -- penetrated by identity thieves. The computer's ability to
collect an infinity of data about individuals -- tracking every movement and
purchase, assembling facts and traits in a personal dossier, forgetting nothing
-- was in place before 9/11. But among the unremarked casualties of that day was
a value that Americans once treasured: personal privacy. William
Sapphire, "Goodbye to Privacy," The New York Times, April 10, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/books/review/10COVERSAFIRE.html
April 9, 2005 reply from a Trinity University faculty member:
Case in point. Maybe 15 or 20 years ago I received
a call from Trinity Security. XXXXX's husband had died and they could
not reach her to tell her about it because she had an unlisted number. I
knew YYYYY had XXXXX's number but we could not call him because he had an
unlisted number. I don't remember how that worked out but it was very
frustrating,
We have several faculty who over the years had
minor children. I just shutter what would happen if one of the children was
seriously hurt and unconscious but they could not be notified because they
have unlisted phone numbers.
Jensen Comment
An alternative to unlisted phone service is something like what SBC now offers
in selected cities in most states (but not most towns at this point in
time). The link for Texas is at
http://www01.sbc.com/Products_Services/Residential/ProdInfo_1/1,,97--6-3-0,00.html
Privacy Manager® is a service
that screens your calls so you know
who it is before you pick up.
Pricing
(keep in mind that there is also a
monthly fee for unlisting your phone
number)
$5.99 per month for Privacy Manager®
$5.00 one time installation fee
What will it
do for me? (According to SBC)
-
Protect your privacy — A
recording will notify the caller
that you do not accept
unidentified, anonymous, or out
of area calls. A series of
choices will guide the caller to
self-identify. You then have
four options for handling the
call: send to
voice mail,
accept, decline or place on a do
not call list if the caller is a
telemarketer. To hear a
demonstration of the service
call 1-888-560-9299.
-
Save time — If a phone
solicitor calls, one of the
options you have is to be placed
on a telemarketer's do not call
list. This prevents you from
having to make time to provide a
written request or call to have
this done.
-
Have peace of mind — Our
service requires that callers
self identify or the phone
doesn't even ring. This keeps
you from dealing with annoying
or unwanted calls.
|
|
|
|
|
April 9, 2005 reply from Jagdish Gangolly
[JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
There is a much simpler and costless solution to
the problem. It is at
www.skype.com . I do not know if there has been a
message about it on AECM already.
It is free as long as both parties are on the
internet. If you want to call a landline phone, you need to prepay, but
their rates are something like 2cents a minute within US.
I make most of the calls through this service, and
have found it in fact to be superior to landlines. I have called/ received
calls from Switzerland, Germany, and India for free till now.
I know precisely who is calling me, because the
caller has to first ask me for my permission before the call goes through.
Moreover I can dump any one I don't want to hear from.
If you want to call me, you can skype me from my
new homepage (still under construction; the graduate student idiot was
redoing our web pages was inadvertantly given permission to myweb directory,
not an accountant by the way, trashed my whole directory). It is at
www.albany.edu/faculty/gangolly
You can read about this at:
Net calls to take on landlines
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3927977.stm
Some Skype users might experience
problems connecting to Skype network due to installed firewall on their
computer (Skype error #1102). Skype should work with any firewall and router
hardware/software.
Skype needs unrestricted outgoing TCP connections to some TCP ports. If you
fail to connect to Skype network, it is likely that your firewall is
blocking these and you need to open up some outgoing TCP connections. Note
that this is about outgoing connections, not incoming connections. In most
firewalls, you have to specify a destination port or port range to open.
There are four options for Skype to work:
* Ideally, outgoing TCP connections to all ports (1..65535) should be
opened. This option results in Skype working most reliably. This is only
necessary for your Skype to be able to connect to the Skype network and will
not make your network any less secure.
* If the above is not possible, open up outgoing TCP connections to port
443. This will only work if you are using Skype version 0.97 or later.
* If the above is not possible, open up outgoing TCP connections to port
80. Some firewalls restrict traffic to port 80 to HTTP protocol, and in this
case Skype can not use it since Skype does not use HTTP. In some firewalls
it is possible to open up all traffic to port 80, not just HTTP, and in this
case Skype will work.
* If the above is not possible, Skype versions 0.97 or later can use a
HTTPS/SSL proxy. In order to do that, you have to configure the proxy
address in Internet Explorer options. Then Skype will be able to use it as
well.
Jagdish
Second reply on April 10, 2005 from Jagdish Gangolly
[JGangolly@UAMAIL.ALBANY.EDU]
Bob,
1. I have the firewall that comes with windows xp,
and I use our office wireless access point which, unfortunately has not been
set up for WEP. Our CISCO router is secure.
2. I have had no problems at home either (even with
the firewall that came with my DSL router; I have set up my wireless router
for WEP).
3. You can reach landline phones while on the
internet, though it is not free. On the other hand, people using landlines
can not reach you on the internet. However, you can arrange conference calls
on the internet, which are also free, but my friends elsewhere tell me it
doesn't work that well. Apparently skype has become very popular among the
Bschool grad students; it saves them trips to schools on weekends to do
group work.
4. Once VOIP becomes ubiquitous, it is possible
that the seamless communications between landphones and internet that you
are looking for will be possible, but we are not there yet.
I am really glad I do not own much of phone company
stocks.
Jagdish
April 10, 2005 reply from Eric Press
[eric.press@TEMPLE.EDU]
I recently set up VOIP in my house. I have Comcast
broadband, and use AT&T Callvantage. I had no trouble getting phone service
when I plugged in the telephone adapter (TA), which inserts between the
cable modem and a Linksys wireless .g router (after I disconnected my house
from the grid--a symbolic moment, sort of the reverse of the gold spike at
Promontory, Utah). I don't observe any problems of firewall interference
with calling.
What I did have trouble with was getting service
back to the other phones in my house. Service through the jack system was
spotty. The solution was to circumvent the phone-jack problem, and go
wireless with the phones, too. I bought a Panasonic KX-TG5423, a small
office, 5.8 Ghz digital phone system. These are an order of magnitude better
telephones than I've ever used. It's uncanny when you talk to someone. If
there's a pause, you wonder if the caller is still there, because there is
no background hum, only perfect quiet. The 5.8Ghz standard apparently was
developed for use with VOIP (according to the online seller of the
Panasonic), and does not interfere with other frequencies in use in a home.
There are 5.8Ghz expandable systems (the
incremental units register with the base, and then work), but the systems I
viewed handle a maximum of 10 units. If you need 12 telephones on one line,
you're out of luck for now. I should also mention you can get VOIP and
wireless phones for a two-line system, as well.
April 10, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
This is really helpful Eric.
Are you saving money now? If so, this is a form of arbitraging. As we
know full well, arbitraging profits (or savings) are generally short lived.
Either Congress or the FCC will probably soon equate Internet and landline
regulations, fees, and taxes. Otherwise traditional local phone service will
disappear as an option since it not presently profitable and can only be
rendered a bigger loser if your cheaper system is all that is needed.
I assume your closest friends can call you from a regular phone. I also
assume that this is equivalent to an unlisted number since you aren’t in any
local or national directory. As such it does run the problem that I
mentioned earlier about trying to reach a woman whose husband had died or
children had been seriously injured. I suspect, however, that we will one
day have Internet telephony phone directories.
Thanks,
Bob Jensen
April 10, 2005 reply from Eric Press
[eric.press@TEMPLE.EDU]
Bob,
1. Shhhhhhhhh! The total freight on ATT CallVantage
VOIP is about $32/monthly. There is a startling oversight I see in the
taxation, and I concur the differential should, or could disappear. It
depends how fast VOIP is adopted. E.g., I am NOT charged the $6.50 monthly
FCC connect charge. So VOIP isn't telephony, from Congress' perspective?
Other state and local taxes are circumvented, too. I probably avoid $10 or
$12 a month of tax (not evade---it is NOT levied!) The legislators are
perhaps not so technologically hip.
2. BTW, I switched from ATT One-Rate Plus, figuring
it'd be easier to go back to landline telephone if VOIP didn't work. Vonage
is $5 cheaper, and Lingo is $10 cheaper! But regardless, assuming VOIP keeps
working well, it is superior. Its features are impressive. A few: have your
phone calls track you, i.e., dial successive numbers if you do not pick up
after n rings. Another, send your voicemail as email files. All voicemail
generates an email notice to wife that we have a call. For ATT, LD calls to
US and Canada are included. Lingo has US, Canada, and 11 European countries
included.
3. My VOIP phone number is my old phone number
(another reason I stuck w/ ATT). Whether that shows up in next year's
landline directory is another matter. Good point you make per emergencies.
Tell your friends, contacts, schools, etc. your number, and carry it in your
wallet, which echoes P.Doherty's advice.
April 10, 2005 reply from David Fordham, James Madison University
[fordhadr@JMU.EDU]
In addition to Cable ISP service, more and more
cable TV companies are offering voice telephony delivered over their coaxial
cables. But this is NOT the analog "Plain Old Telephone Service" that the
phone company offers over the old unshielded twisted pair wires that run
between your house and the phone company; it is a digital packet-based
service like the internet packets. It requires a DIFFERENT box than a normal
cable modem: one with both your traditional Internet cable modem in it,
along with a second device (usually inside a single case) capable of
splitting out the telephone packets. The phone packets, instead of being
converted into Ethernet net packets, are converted into plain old analog
telephone system voltages, which can then be "piped" into your house's
existing wiring and distributed to as many phones as your have in your
house. Unfortunately, being analog, there is only so much voltage and
current to go around. Commercial telephone companies generally only
guarantee five (5) phones will work, but if you live close to the phone
company's central office, often you can get many more (I live less than a km
from my CO and I get nine phones to work with no problem). The cable modem
boxes, however, may NOT pump out as much voltage and current as a CO, and
thus likely will NOT drive as many phones as you can get to work when you
live close to a CO. But most of them will still drive at least five phones,
usually a few more.
Now let's turn our attention to yet another, very
different, technology. Skype. Skype is NOT the same service as the phone
service provided over the cable TV system. Skype is a phone service which
uses your computer's sound card and converts your voice into STANDARD
internet packets... the same packets that are used to transfer MP3 songs
from Kazaa, JPEG files from the weather bureau, and this listserv message.
Skype is a free computer program that runs on any
PC. It uses peer-to-peer technology (like Napster did) to exchange standard
internet packets. But those packets are identified as Skype packets by their
"port" number contained in the packet headers. (Port numbers are
"classifications" used by the internet system so it can tell the difference
between web pages, mail messages, FTP sessions, Centra on-line conference
sessions, DNS requests, and all other standard TCP/IP traffic).
One of the three primary ways that a firewall works
is to BLOCK all TCP/IP packets which don't have "approved" port number
identifiers. The reason Skype won't pass some firewalls is those firewalls
are blocking the port number which Skype uses to identify its packets.
Getting skype packets through a firewall is as simple as asking your
firewall manager to "open" or "enable" or "allow" the port number used by
Skype. (I can't remember the number right now, but Google should be able to
tell you.) If you are using Windows firewall, you need to "open" that
firewall to Skype's port number.
Skype works WONDERFUL, but it requires you to be
running the Skype program on the computer before someone can call you. Skype
can run in the background so it can stay in the system tray until someone
calls you, while you get other work done. But your computer has to be on.
One of the main problems with Skype, is it
restricts you to one computer at a time. If you "logged on" to Skype on your
office computer, the system thinks you are at the office, and will route
"calls" to the office. You cannot simultaneously log on at the office and at
home. And you cannot easily port a Skype call from your kitchen computer to
your den computer to your living room computer like you can an analog phone
via in-house phone wiring. One computer. Period.
Skype can place outgoing calls (for a fee) from a
computer to a landline phone, by accessing Skype's server which
interconnects the internet into the plain old telephone system. It costs
money, though, since your are placing a call from a Skype server location to
whatever phone you are calling to.
And has been pointed out, Skype does not (YET!)
offer incoming calls from the plain old phone system. Originators of Skype
calls must be at a computer.
HOWEVER, a system which DOES provide incoming calls
from plain telephones is a service by the name of VONAGE. Vonage, which is a
fee-based service, works almost exactly like Skype, except that it lets you
choose a local phone number in ANY area code that Vonage covers, and when
someone on the POTS dials that phone number, Vonage pipes the call to your
computer like a "Skype" call. For example, a colleague of mine who has kids
at BYU has obtained a local Provo Utah phone number. His kids call a local
number, and his computer rings in his office, and he answers the call via
his sound card. Anyone in the world can dial that landline phone number (for
example, you can call the Utah number from a phone in Austin, New York, or
Melbourne, using any long-distance service you want), and his computer will
ring.
The catch? He must still be at his computer to use
the service! His computer must be on. And one computer at a time... no
"extension phones".
So to summarize, you have (1) cable phone service,
which utilizes a special modem to split out digitized phone service off a
coaxial TV cable into analog telephone signals; (2) you have Skype, which is
a program run on your computer which uses traditional internet to transfer
digitized voice files two-ways in real time, and (3) you have Vonage, which
is a program run on your computer like Skype, but which is a little bit
ahead of the curve because it allows you to have an analog phone number
somewhere so people without computers can call you on your computer.
These are the three technologies I've seem come
across the list in the last few hours. There are several additional
telephone technologies out there, too, but I won't cover what's not being
discussed. All of these are competition for what most of us gray-hairs
remember as the "Bell System", and ancient artifact of a by-gone era.
And lest someone take offense at my comm style,
I'll say up front that I don't begrudge anyone using ANY of these tools...
they are all DIFFERENT, not necessarily BETTER than one another. I have used
all three, and all three provide decent (not perfect, but certainly usable)
replacement service for the public switched telephone network. Skype works
best if all your callers and callees use computers and also use only one
computer at a time, and don't need to be reached when their computer is off
or they are away from one of the computers. Vonage works best if you are a
computer and your callers or callees are not always at a computer but are at
landline or cell phone units. Cable phone service is simply an alternate
provider of landline telephone service, a true competitor to your local
phone company, but one which provides service which typically is interrupted
more frequently than the old reliable POTS due to growing pains of the
digital cable networks.
David Fordham
PBGH Faculty Fellow
James Madison University
April 10, 2005 reply from Eric Press
[eric.press@TEMPLE.EDU]
Bro' David,
You're right that recent posts, including mine,
conflate technologies. Thanks for setting me straight.
I confused ATTCallVantage and Vonage. You explain
that Vonage is Internet-based. I presumed that CallVantage was cable-based,
and when I shut off my computer, and dialed my number with my cellphone and
it rang (performing the experiment to answer Jensen's question), I
demonstrate that truth. I thought ATT was just trying to charge a premium
vs. Vonage and Lingo, but it provides a different service, cable-based
telephony with a very nice Web-based interface. So, even if it's $10 more
expensive per month ($29 vs. $19 for Lingo), I now mind less paying for its
service (which is still $40 cheaper than a landline).
Per the problem of getting multiple phones to ring
given the voltages available, wouldn't you say my solution--install wireless
phones--does the trick? You can pull all the power you need into the base
unit, and the 5Ghz phones are supposed to broadcast a quarter of a mile. One
new phenomenon I note is buying new power strips to run the 12v
transformers. I now have three--cable modem, telephone adapter, and
router--and each takes at least two slots on a linear strip. Someone should
design a circular strip and let their cases hang over the side.
Eric
April 10, 2005 reply from Scott Bonacker
[lister@BONACKERS.COM]
Any of these methods carry their own set of risks
and may not work in all instances.
Setting up VOIP service seems to resemble building
a golf course in a rural area. Maintaining the greens takes so much water
that the neighbors with wells realize that the supply may not be unlimited
after all and start calling for restrictions.
Privacy laws written for phone calls on
conventional lines don't apply when the call is carried another way.
Resistance from carriers - see white paper on ex-parte
letter at http://www.nuvio.com/.
Security restrictions often found on institutional
networks [snipped without verification from merit.edu mail archives]:
>>>> Something else to consider. We block TFTP at
our border for security reasons >>>> and we've found that this prevents
Vonage from working. Would this mean that >>>> LEC's can't block TFTP? >>>
>>> Was that a device trying to phone home and get it's configs? >>> Cisco,
Nortel, etc. phone home and get configs via tftp. >>> >>> Vonage doesn't
need to phone home for config. The device is >>> programmed (router) and it
registers with the call manager. >>> If you analyze the transactions it's
about 89% SIP and 11% SDP. >> >> Vonage devices initiate an outbound TFTP
connection back to Vonage to >> snarf their configs on initial connection
And also maybe yet another reason not to move to a
rural area where dialup may be the only way to connect to the internet.
Although fiber is (only) a mile away from here, it's point-to-point only and
$560 per month.
How about you, Bob Jensen, what's your access
method?
Scott Bonacker
Rogersville, Missouri
April 10, 2005 reply from Bob Jensen
Scott asked: How about you, Bob Jensen, what's your access method?
Mountaineer Jensen was saved by a bankrupt company (Adelphia) which had a
TV cable buried in the mountains many years before the company could afford
an Internet server. Six months before we moved to the mountains, Adelphia
commenced offering the Internet and at a pretty good monthly rate which I
can't recall since my wife does not trust me with a checkbook.
I live in fear that Time-Warner will buy out Alelphia and ruin both TV
and the Internet with high fees for poor service (like we had in San
Antonio).
Unlike all the telephony/cable telephone enthusiasts, I will stick to
landline since cell phones don't work behind our mountains and electric
power tends to shut down too often for telephony safety. Our landline phone
has never failed even though our rains and blizzards are often accompanied
by winds over 50 mph (equating to over 150 mph atop Mt Washington) that kill
electric power. The landline phone lets us call out in an emergency and
keeps our security system (including our landline fire alarm) up and
running. My wife looks forward to power outages that shut down my computer.
We tend to treat these candle lit power outages as cuddle times.
I am a bit surprised that nobody mentioned that many security systems use
the landline phone system. It is possible to install a radio alarm system
that does not rely on a landline phone, but the added monthly cost is very
high in the boon docks. Crime is very rare in our remote area so I don't see
much need for the radio alarm that would work if a bad guy cut the phone
line. I'm more concerned about fire starting or furnace quitting. As long as
the landline phone system is so reliable, we thereby have great fire/freeze
protection for our house when we're not at home.
Bob Jensen
PS
Your analogy about the golf course and water tables is perfect. My
four acres are bounded on two sides by a golf course. There have been
seasons some years back when the wells of the golf course and its lovely
34-room Sunset Hill House Inn went dry. Fortunately the few neighbors
I have do not draw from Adelphia's "water" systems for computing purposes.
You can scroll down a bit for pictures of the Sunset Hill House at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/NHcottage/NHcottage.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on security issues are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm
Question
Why should teaching a course online take "twice as much time" as teaching it
onsite?
Answer
Introduction to Economics: Experiences of teaching this course online versus
onsite
With a growing number of courses offered online and
degrees offered through the Internet, there is a considerable interest in online
education, particularly as it relates to the quality of online instruction. The
major concerns are centering on the following questions: What will be the new
role for instructors in online education? How will students' learning outcomes
be assured and improved in online learning environment? How will effective
communication and interaction be established with students in the absence of
face-to-face instruction? How will instructors motivate students to learn in the
online learning environment? This paper will examine new challenges and barriers
for online instructors, highlight major themes prevalent in the literature
related to “quality control or assurance” in online education, and provide
practical strategies for instructors to design and deliver effective online
instruction. Recommendations will be made on how to prepare instructors for
quality online instruction.
Yi Yang and Linda F. Cornelious, "Preparing Instructors for Quality
Online Instruction, Working Paper ---
http://www.westga.edu/%7Edistance/ojdla/spring81/yang81.htm
Jensen Comment: The bottom line is that teaching the course online took
twice as much time because "largely from increased student contact and
individualized instruction and not from the use of technology per se." Online
teaching is more likely to result in instructor burnout. These and other issues
are discussed in my "dark side" paper at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the positive side are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
Bob Jensen's documents on education technology are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
April 2, 2005 reply from Glen Gray [glen.gray@CSUN.EDU]
Here is what I know about online courses:
Any time I go to a conference and somebody is
presenting a paper about an online project they were involved in, I ask the
same questions: if you had to do it over again, would you? Only once, so
far, has the speaker said yes. That was a faculty member from BYU (forgot
his name) who was selling a CD for an accounting course that he had
developed.
The most common responses were it took way too much
time—and I never got to see my husband/wife while developing the course—and
my dean/chair/colleagues did not appreciate what I invested in the project,
particularly when it came time for promotion and tenure evaluations.
One answer really stands out. The presenter was
describing how he had basically an unlimited budget to bring in content
people, computer people, and media people. Everything was going to be first
class—a “true” test of online courses—no cutting corners.
I asked my usual question (Do it again?). The
response—no! Took too much time to create and takes too much time to
maintain, which was something they hadn’t given much thought to as the start
of the project. But the real punch line: The students who could the online
course were given the same assignments, midterms, and final exams as the
traditional classroom students and 50% ended up with Fs in the course! The
Dean said you can’t give Fs to half the students. The faculty said we are
NOT going to change the grades because all (online and offline) students
were given the same tests. This created a lot of animosity between the dean
and the faculty, which created a big cloud over the online
project—reflecting badly on everybody involved in the project. That is, it
was totally the faculties fault that the students did poorly.
Glen L. Gray, PhD, CPA
Dept. of Accounting & Information Systems
College of Business & Economics
California State University, Northridge
Northridge, CA 91330-8372
http://www.csun.edu/~vcact00f
April 2, 2005 reply from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
Glen Gray wrote:
if you had to do it over again, would you? Only once, so far, has the
speaker said yes.
Here's another YES!
I would do it again and again and again. I love teaching online. Sometimes I
miss teaching FTF classes, but I would miss teaching online if I didn't get
to do that. Of course, it helps to love technology, which I do. Tools like
Camtasia make my life so nice! And becoming reasonably adept in Dreamweaver
so I can use templates and have changes roll though all my pages
automatically when I change the template make my life much easier. I have
become much more efficient as the years go by. But hey, I remember
developing my first FTF class. I spent an incredible amount of time
developing the projects, notes, exams, etc. Then every semester I was busy
updating, too. Hard to see much difference for me.
As for the Fs, something went wrong someplace. I would be curious to know
how the students in the online class were engaged. If the course isn't
designed to get the students to actively engage they aren't going to learn.
Just reading material online or watching a video online doesn't work for
most students any better than just reading the textbook or half-listening to
the prof. My students are online in chat rooms working on a regular basis
with each other and/or me. If the pencil isn't moving, the brain isn't
learning - that's my motto.
I described the process of creating my online
courses in a recent Issues in Accounting Education paper, which I attached.
I used Dreamweaver to create my online modules, which have links to
self-tests created in Flash or Dreamweaver, Excel files, and videos created
with Camtasia. The hardest part for me was the initial design of the content
pages to create the menus, etc - ie designing the template. Once I did that,
the rest was OK. The part, however, that I consider essential to teaching
online is to interact with the students synchronously. I use AIM for this
purpose, and it works great. I put students in groups based on when they
want to work together, and the groups work through quizzes that are long
because I learned that if I want the students to learn a certain point, I
have to have a question on that point. The students work together and pull
me into chat when they can't resolve an issue. I know when groups plan to
work online, and I have become much better at limiting my online time to
those times when I know groups will be working. I have to be flexible, but I
can still get a lot of other work done now that I am more efficient at
online time. The first time through I was really inefficient, but it's much
better now that I can update Dreamweaver content quickly and create a
Camtasia video quickly.
My course still needs a lot of work, but it gets
better every semester.
To get an idea of what I require for projects,
check out
http://www.business.uconn.edu/users/msacct/ACCT_371/content_modules/Projects/projects_toc_t.htm
For a page with self-test and videos, see the links
at the top of this page (not every page has links) ---
http://snipurl.com/DunbarApril2
My quizzes are created in WebCT. I have student
pics in my password-protected WebCT site, too. I print those out every
semester, so I can see the students when I am talking to them online. It
helps me relate better to the student if I can visualize them. I take the
pics when the students attend the one-week required on-campus course at the
beginning of our master's program.
I'm about to update the course for my three summer
sections of ACCT 371, so the site will look better in another month or so.
Amy UConn
April 4, 2005 reply from Amy Dunbar
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU]
An online-course is equivalent to a face-to-face
class. A full load at UConn is four courses. I teach 3 12-week courses in
the summer and 1 12-week course in the fall, all online graduate courses. I
was just notified today that this year I will received the School of
Business graduate teaching award. I say this to point out that online
instructors are considered the same as face-to-face instructors. I was
considered along with the MBA ftf instructors and other graduate
instructors.
Regarding copyright, I certainly consider my class
materials to be mine, but they wouldn't be much use to any one else. Pics of
my grandson are in them at various places. ;-) I think of the content much
like I thought of my class notes when I taught ftf. I do not charge my
students for access to the online materials, so they benefit because they
are not required to purchase a textbook.
Jensen comment: You can read more about Amy's online experiments at
the following sites:
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/book01q4.htm#Dunbar
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/002cpe/02start.htm#2002 (with
audio)
You've got to love this granny. She's into the
spirit of sharing and open courseware.
April 4, 2005 message from David Fordham
One of the main differences between on-line and
in-person teaching is the additional activities in which the professor is
engaged, which are usually not offset by commensurate reductions in the
other professorial activities required by the course.
This coming summer will be the fourth year I have
taught a course in our on-line MBA program. I have to agree that on- line
courses require more time than in-person ones, even after the learning
curves are considered. Would I do it over again? Yes, but only because they
pay me more for doing it!
In a standard classroom, much of the professor's
time is spent (a) selecting/choosing material, (b) organizing it into
presentations and/or preparing discussions and other classroom activity, (c)
delivering it in the classroom, (d) designing/selecting instruments for
student practice, (e) designing/selecting instruments for student
assessment, (f) meeting one-on-one with individual students to answer
questions and provide individualized attention, and (g) evaluating student
performance (called "grading" in some circles!).
Some professors also spend time converting their
class presentations into tech tools, such as PowerPoint or posting on
Blackboard, so these professors have (h) an added learning-curve time
component, plus (i) the time necessary to load the content into the
technology.
In an on-line course, the professor still has all
of the above tasks to perform, with the possible exception of (c) -- and if
the course is a synchronous one, that too is required! PLUS, the on-line
professor has more (and usually *more complex*) tools for on-line delivery
to (j) learn and (k) manipulate. And because of the nature of the on-line
course, my experience has been that I must use the standard tech tools (such
as Robodemo or Blackboard) far more heavily, increasing the amount of time I
spend on (i) loading the content into the technology.
Additionally, my experience has been that on-line
courses greatly increase demand for item (f), the one-on-one communication,
whether during by phone during office hours or via email or discussion
boards.
The only reductions in time between the on-line and
in- person teacher is the time spent walking between my office and the
classroom, and the expanded use of recorded lecture/presentation sessions...
assuming the topic is one where a lecture can remain current for more than
one semester (in my fields, Information Technology and Information Security,
they usually are obsolete within a year).
Now, about the tools I use:
I use Tegrity for recording lecture/PowerPoint
presentations. It is quick, easy, and has a very short learning curve.
Playback is asynchronous, meaning students do it on their own time.
We use Centra for the synchronous on-line class
meetings, and Centra has a feature for recording the complete class meeting.
Students attend class on-line synchronously, but can play back the recording
at their leisure.
We save our text-chat log as text files and make it
available on Blackboard.
We use Blackboard for conveying "handouts", slides,
references, links, readings, assignments, and other class materials.
Unlike Apreso, all of the above tools are behind
authentication servers, so they are not accessible to the general public.
This protects us from those darn copyright fanatics, those digital
intellectual property lawyers and others who like to make trouble for
educators over our dedication to knowledge transfer and distribution.
Students must have a university log-in to access the Tegrity recordings, the
Centra recordings, and the Blackboard material. I can't begin to express my
thankfulness at not having to worry about what I include or post. Being
behind an authentication server, my on-line materials are considered "within
the walls of a legitimate classroom" and are way, way out of the gray area,
well into the safe zone of "fair use".
Unfortunately, it also prevents me from sharing
examples of my work with list denizens, except at an in-person conference or
something. ... sigh ...
(There is a provision in all of these tools for
"guest" log- ins, but JMU's InfoSec department is somewhat paranoid about
opening those up, since we have an InfoSec program and therefore consider
ourselves "an attractive target"!)
I am thinking of moving away from Tegrity
recordings for lectures, and going to DVD-based video, simply because I'm
learning to use video-editing software for personal use and although it will
require even more preparation time, I believe the editing capabilities will
enable me to give the student a higher-quality presentation.
To repeat: Would I teach an on-line course again?
Only if they continue to pay me more than an in-person class or otherwise
compensate me for the additional time it requires.
David Fordham
April 4, 2005 reply from Dr. Jagdish Pathak
[jagdish@UWINDSOR.CA]
I teach three such courses known here as "Flexible
and distance learning Program".One course is designed by me and paid in one
lump sum with no provision of any royalty in future. However, I am permitted
to teach this course for first four years and if it happens to be over-load
then I am separately paid for teaching like any sessional is to be paid by
the School. However, after four years of offering, if I consider that the
course needs revision, Dean may propose the same and I may be paid again but
half the sum of the original. And, it goes on like this. The drawback of
this distance course is that instructor is not entitled to any TA/GA support
from the School. One more point in original payment is worth considering
here. It is not one fixed figure but a range and the final figure is decided
by the Director of Flexible Learning who looks into your level of expertise
and experience in particular course before letting you know the amount. This
Director is not a part of Business School and works directly under the
VP-Academic because they design courses for all the faculties.
I hope that it helps.
Jagdish Pathak, PhD
Guest Editor- Managerial Auditing Journal (Special Issue)
Accounting Systems & IT Auditing Faculty Accounting & Audit Area
Odette School of Business
University of Windsor 401 Sunset
Windsor, N9B 3P4, ON Canada
April 3, 2005 reply from Saeed Roohani
[sroohani@COX.NET]
I am teaching an ERP course online. Because we are
experimenting with DL learning, we also ask students to meet with the
professor FTF 2 or 3 times a semester, some called it Blended! You can plan
the FTF sessions any time and anywhere you want, I have it on Saturdays
9-12, one at the beginning, one in the middle, and one at the end of the
semester.
We subscribe to SAP services on line, no purchasing
or maintaining hardware/software (this is the best way); instructor and
students access SAP from the web from anywhere to do assignments, we also
have a few virtual office hours/week.
In our weekly 80 minutes DL sessions, I give a
short MC quiz (they see the results immediately), present the topic and
issues (I like using PC Tablet ), almost every student gets involved in
discussion of issues, at the end of session one student makes a 15 minutes
presentation to the class about previously assigned article with questions
and answers, and finally we conclude with a summary and few housekeeping
items.
This is my first time teaching DL, it feels like I
am not missing much from FTF, although my evaluations after 4 weeks show
that students liked the FTF session of the class slightly better; and my
overall class evaluation was slightly worse than my regular classes A major
difference in my preparation is that I have to be more organized and have
things ready much in advance. I don't see it more time consuming than FTF.
Also, people say teaching DL course make you a
better FTF teacher, perhaps this is true. I will let you know more as I
learn more.
Saeed
April 3 and 4, 2005 messages from Eric Press
[eric.press@TEMPLE.EDU]
I spent a bit of time looking through Amy's Acct
371 tax course. Quite impressive, especially all the careful outlining and
fine examples presented. I want to add another voice to "Online courses are
neither more onerous, nor potentially disastrous, in comparison to
face-to-face courses."
Although I'm not nearly as organized as Amy, in
essence I run the two online courses I teach using MS Office to glue my
presentations together. I.e., I took the files in Word, Excel, and
Powerpoint that I'd been using when I taught face-to-face, and adapted them
for online purposes. What really makes my online courses work well are
Apreso and Blackboard. I use Apreso's Class Capture feature, and then post
the links to the captures into Blackboard, where students can also download
all the files I'm discussing in the lectures.
What this has done is build an inventory of
narrated lectures and commentary on problem solving that both online and
f-t-f students use. Indeed, teaching online improved my f-t-f courses,
mainly because the Apreso captures enable our class meetings--which formerly
were mostly me lecturing--to turn into me running a laboratory. I.e., since
the students can listen to the lectures before class (twice, or thrice
even), I spend much less time lecturing than I did, say, two years ago, and
much more time discussing problem-solving strategies, or whatever other
matters are important to students. The phenomenon of inventorying lectures I
view as revolutionary---lecture labor was always JIT, but now I get to bank
it!
Bottom line for me is that online- or
distance-learning technology seems finally to be paying off on the
investment I've made. Class capture (Apreso) and efficient course management
(Blackboard) are the tools that have made it profitable. And, I don't notice
much difference between the quality of work from online versus ftf students.
OK...back from DST walk of child to bus stop. Re:
How I use Apreso to do class capture?
It's pretty invisible. In the undergrad Management
Accounting class I'm teaching now, Apreso is automatically scheduled to
start and stop at the class times. That means I don't have to touch any
scheduler when I walk into class, and the link to the Apreso lecture is
automatically delivered into my course Blackboard site. So, what DO I have
to do? Either put on a lapel microphone, use a handheld mike, or speak into
the podium mike. All my audio feeds, plus students (muffled, unless I let
them use the handheld, but typically I repeat their questions), plus every
key stroke on the podium PC, gets pulled in to the Apreso session.
The only thing that is missing is what I write on
the board. There are systems for writing on a screen pad, and capturing
that, too. Thus, it is possible to capture just about everything in class,
except for the instructor's lovely visage.
One downside in the class I teach is that when I
have a break at 630 (class runs Thursdays, 440-710PM), half the class
leaves. Undergraduates! and I think they are hungry. Besides, I think they
reason, the lecture is in Apreso.
Below is the link to the auto-capture from last
Thursday's class. It's on capital budgeting, time value of money, NPV and
IRR, and will demo how Excel is incorporated into explanations in a
real-time application (quite similar to what I saw in Amy Dunbar's UConn
course, except I was running the class with face-to-face students, i.e., I
was in real time and interacting with them, not lecturing alone to a
machine).
Depending on how much time you invest in my
lecture, you will notice when you don't get the writing I did on the board
(discussion of formulae, that you must follow verbally). Note, too, that
once the Apreso file loads (you'll need a fast connection---DO NOT attempt
from dial up), you can skip through the file to various points in the
lecture. Bored? You can speed up the talking, too.
Thu, Mar 31, 2005, 4:40 PM - ACCT0002 SPRING 2005
Capture Date/Time: Thu, Mar 31, 2005, 4:40 PM ACCT0002 SPRING 2005 ---
http://apreso1.isc.temple.edu/apreso0002/15224_FOXSP115_2005-03-31_04-40-PM.htm
Anyway, this file shows a use of Apreso in a class
setting. Fox School probably has 100,000 minutes of Apreso captures, and I
can post the link to the index of all instructors' captures, which would
show numerous other applications and tricks (e.g., students with voting
units, that instantly register and display their responses to instructor
questions).
These lectures I'd guess are mostly on publicly
accessible servers, so you could avail yourself of hours of academic arcana,
and other practical topics. Talk about free riding!
Eric Press, Ph.D., C.P.A.
Associate Professor of Accounting Fox School of Business
335 Speakman Hall
Temple University Philadelphia, PA 19122
eric.press@temple.edu
http://isc.temple.edu/epress/
April 4, 2005 message from Richard Campbell
[campbell@RIO.EDU]
Amy Dunbar states: "Regarding copyright, I
certainly consider my class materials to be mine, but they wouldn't be much
use to any one else. Pics of my grandson are in them at various places. ;-)
I think of the content much like I thought of my class notes when I taught
ftf. I do not charge my students for access to the online materials, so they
benefit because they are not required to purchase a textbook."
Amy: Don't count on it. UConn's intellectual
property attorney could probably assert that what you have created was a
"work-for-hire" and if your work is on the college web server, Uconn could
assert ownership over your work.
I can give you a horror story about a psych
professor in Canada who got a faculty development grant to create an "Intro
to Pscyhology" CD. He spent 1000's of hours developing a great product. The
university congratulated him and said that because of budget constraints,
they were going to use the CD in lieu of faculty. He estimated that his
hourly compensation approached $5.00 per development hour.
Richard Campbell
The Walt Whitman Archive ---
http://www.whitmanarchive.org/
April 1, 2005 message from Carolyn Kotlas
[kotlas@email.unc.edu]
COMPUTERS IN THE CLASSROOM AND OPEN BOOK EXAMS
In "PCs in the Classroom & Open Book Exams" (UBIQUITY, vol. 6, issue 9,
March 15-22, 2005), Evan Golub asks and supplies some answers to questions
regarding open-book/open-note exams. When classroom computer use is allowed
and encouraged, how can instructors secure the open-book exam environment?
How can cheating be minimized when students are allowed Internet access
during open-book exams? Golub's suggested solutions are available online at
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/views/v6i9_golub.html
Ubiquity is a free, Web-based publication of the
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), "dedicated to fostering critical
analysis and in-depth commentary on issues relating to the nature,
constitution, structure, science, engineering, technology, practices, and
paradigms of the IT profession." For more information, contact: Ubiquity,
email: ubiquity@acm.org ; Web:
http://www.acm.org/ubiquity/
For more information on the ACM, contact: ACM, One Astor Plaza, 1515
Broadway, New York, NY 10036, USA; tel: 800-342-6626 or 212-626-0500; Web:
http://www.acm.org/
NEW EDUCAUSE E-BOOK ON THE NET GENERATION
EDUCATING THE NET GENERATION, a new EDUCAUSE
e-book of essays edited by Diana G. Oblinger and James L. Oblinger,
"explores the Net Gen and the implications for institutions in areas such as
teaching, service, learning space design, faculty development, and
curriculum." Essays include: "Technology and Learning Expectations of the
Net Generation;" "Using Technology as a Learning Tool, Not Just the Cool New
Thing;" "Curricula Designed to Meet 21st-Century Expectations;" "Faculty
Development for the Net Generation;" and "Net Generation Students and
Libraries." The entire book is available online at no cost at
http://www.educause.edu/educatingthenetgen/
.
EDUCAUSE is a nonprofit association whose mission
is to advance higher education by promoting the intelligent use of
information technology. For more information, contact: Educause, 4772 Walnut
Street, Suite 206, Boulder, CO 80301-2538 USA; tel: 303-449-4430; fax:
303-440-0461; email:
info@educause.edu; Web:
http://www.educause.edu/
See also:
GROWING UP DIGITAL: THE RISE OF THE NET GENERATION
by Don Tapscott McGraw-Hill, 1999; ISBN: 0-07-063361-4
http://www.growingupdigital.com/
EFFECTIVE E-LEARNING DESIGN
"The unpredictability of the student context and
the mediated relationship with the student require careful attention by the
educational designer to details which might otherwise be managed by the
teacher at the time of instruction." In "Elements of Effective e-Learning
Design" (INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF RESEARCH IN OPEN AND DISTANCE LEARNING,
March 2005) Andrew R. Brown and Bradley D. Voltz cover six elements of
effective design that can help create effective e-learning delivery. Drawing
upon examples from The Le@rning Federation, an initiative of state and
federal governments of Australia and New Zealand, they discuss lesson
planning, instructional design, creative writing, and software
specification. The paper is available online at
http://www.irrodl.org/content/v6.1/brown_voltz.html
International Review of Research in Open and
Distance Learning (IRRODL) [ISSN 1492-3831] is a free, refereed ejournal
published by Athabasca University - Canada's Open University. For more
information, contact Paula Smith, IRRODL Managing Editor; tel: 780-675-6810;
fax: 780-675-672; email:
irrodl@athabascau.ca
; Web:
http://www.irrodl.org/
The Le@rning Federation (TLF) is an "initiative
designed to create online curriculum materials and the necessary
infrastructure to ensure that teachers and students in Australia and New
Zealand can use these materials to widen and enhance their learning
experiences in the classroom." For more information, see
http://www.thelearningfederation.edu.au/
RECOMMENDED READING
"Recommended Reading" lists items that have been
recommended to me or that Infobits readers have found particularly
interesting and/or useful, including books, articles, and websites published
by Infobits subscribers. Send your recommendations to
carolyn_kotlas@unc.edu for possible
inclusion in this column.
Author Clark Aldrich recommends his new book:
LEARNING BY DOING: A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE TO
SIMULATIONS, COMPUTER GAMES, AND PEDAGOGY IN E-LEARNING AND OTHER
EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCES Wiley, April 2005 ISBN: 0-7879-7735-7 hardcover
$60.00 (US)
Description from Wiley website:
"Designed for learning professionals and drawing on
both game creators and instructional designers, Learning by Doing explains
how to select, research, build, sell, deploy, and measure the right type of
educational simulation for the right situation. It covers simple approaches
that use basic or no technology through projects on the scale of computer
games and flight simulators. The book role models content as well, written
accessibly with humor, precision, interactivity, and lots of pictures. Many
will also find it a useful tool to improve communication between themselves
and their customers, employees, sponsors, and colleagues."
The table of contents and some excerpts are
available at
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0787977357.html
Aldrich is also author of SIMULATIONS AND THE FUTURE OF LEARNING: AN
INNOVATIVE (AND PERHAPS REVOLUTIONARY) APPROACH TO E-LEARNING. See
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0787969621.html
for more information or to request an evaluation copy of this title.
Bob Jensen's documents on education technology are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Casting out on the Internet often results in a catch
Over a year ago I posted a dilemma regarding valuation of interest rate
swaps when I attempted to devise a valuation scheme to add to Example 5 in
Appendix B of FAS 133 ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/133ex05d.htm
On March 24, 2005 I received the following message from a nice man that I
do not know named Raphael Keymer
[raph@gawab.com]
I think
I have a solution to your dilemma
I’m responding to a ‘dilema’ you posted on the internet
concerning recalculation of example 5 for FAS 133.
I’ve recalculated the example in question on your web
page and believe I’ve resolved the difference.
The Jarrow
and Turnbill method was not properly implemented
It turns out the implementation of the ‘Jarrow and
Turnbill’ methodology was not correct. When it is
properly implemented both valuation methodologies give
the same value as the first method employed by you.
Corrections required for Jarrow and Turnbill
Only fixed cash flows
on the swap are to be discounted at first
Per the example on pages 435-437, the fixed payments for
the swap are considered first, and then only are the
floating payments considered. This is calculated (in
the worked example) as the present value of the stream
of future fixed cash flows. The original implementation
used a stream of the latest net cash settlement on reset
in place of the stream of fixed cash flows.
The present value of
the floating cash flows needs to be calculated
The original implementation didn’t calculate the present
value of future floating rate cash flows on the swap.
Interpretation of
interest rates was inconsistent with Teets & Uhl
Calculation of discount factors is dependant on the
interpretation of the time period related to interest
rates. The original Jarrow and Turnbill implementation
used interest rates for earlier periods than
those used in the Teets & Uhl implementation. This
‘correction’ will have the least effect on valuation
differences.
Revised
calculations have been attached in a spreadsheet
I placed his attached spreadsheet at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/133ex05aSupplement.xls
My original Example 5 solution is in the 133ex05a.xls Excel workbook at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
Also see 133ex05.htm at
http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/
My comments on swap valuation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133swapvalue.htm
Did the editors of the Princeton Review take a logic course from Princeton
University?
Don’t Moslems
pray often on a “diverse” campus? Are gays openly accepted in some colleges
that are predominantly black or white? Or what if you're gay and don't ignore
God on a regular basis? What if you have lots of racial/class interaction in
the campus chapel? Rather than being “apples” or “oranges,” it seems to me that
most prospective students are mixed baskets.
Also why did
Cal-Berkeley not make the top five on any one of the "apple" criteria? Does Cal
have less racial interaction than the U.S. Air Force Academy or Austin College?
Is the gay community really less accepted at Cal than in the nation's only
Jewish-sponsored college (Brandeis) that made it big in the “more accepted”
category?
The Best 357 Colleges ---
http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/rankings/rankingCategory.asp?categoryID=3
How do you
know that you'll be comfortable -- and that others
will be comfortable with you -- at your chosen
college? We dish the dirt about demographic
backgrounds, lifestyle attitudes and religion.
|
|
Apples
|
Oranges
|
1 McGill University
2 Austin College
3 United States Air Force Academy
4 St. John's College (MD)
5 Webb Institute
|
1 Trinity College (CT)
2 Vanderbilt University
3 Washington and Lee University
4 College of the Holy Cross
5 Miami University |
1 George Mason University
2 Occidental College
3 Temple University
4 CUNY - Hunter College
5 University of Maryland, Baltimore
|
1 Grove City College
2 Saint Anselm College
3 Providence College
4 Loyola College in Maryland
5 Fairfield University |
|
1 Brigham Young University (UT)
2 Wheaton College (IL)
3 Grove City College
4 University of Dallas
5 Samford University |
1 Eugene Lang College
2 New York University
3 Sarah Lawrence College
4 New College of Florida
5 Brandeis University |
1 University of Notre Dame
2 Baylor University
3 Grove City College
4 Wheaton College (IL)
5 Boston College
|
|
|
|
|
Jensen Comment: The above sub-categories fall under the category
"Demographics." The book has other categories where prospective students
may fit into such as Partying, Academic, Political, Quality of Life,
Extracurricular, and Social Categories. Note that the Princeton Review
also provides the following:
Title: Complete book of distance learning schools : everything you need to
earn your degree without leaving home.
Editor: Princeton Review
Publisher: New York : Random House, 2001
Amazon link ---
http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/a4647388fffede6ea19afeb4da09e526.html
Distance education -- Directories. -- United States |
Correspondence schools and courses -- Directories. -- United States |
Universities and colleges -- Directories. -- United States |
University extension -- Directories. -- United States
Also see the U.S. News service for finding distance education programs
--- http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/elearning/elhome.htm
Bob Jensen's links to distance education programs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/crossborder.htm
See the U.S. News service ways for finding college
financial aid --- http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/articles/040906/6stories.h.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on financial aid are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#EducationInGeneral
Forget Big Brother, Now You Are Being Watched by Almost
Anybody
April 6, 2005 message from David Fordham, James Madison University
[fordhadr@JMU.EDU]
Those of us who teach technology honestly, truly,
get a lot of entertainment from old-schoolers who still are under the
mistaken impression that 21st-century humans in developed countries possess
something they call "privacy" outside their bedrooms.
We have been showing students those same satellite
maps for several years now. The Defense Mapping Agency dropped the rule that
prohibited the satellite companies (yes, private enterprise, not the
"Government" that privacy advocates seem to enjoy fearing so much) from
freely distributing their products many years ago (I believe it was early in
the Clinton administration, about the same time they stopped scrambling the
GPS satellite signals, allowing GPS receivers to resolve location down to
about six feet instead of the 200 feet precision that GPS was limited to
prior to the "deregulation".)
This past week, I got a call from an "old-schooler",
gray- haired like me, uninformed (as is a disappointingly-large percentage
of the population) about the nature of some of the "vehicle location"
services being offered under trade names such as On-Star, Lo-Jack, Automatic
Position Reporting System (APRS), etc.
My friend, who owns a vehicle with such a tracking
system, had heard at lunch that there are websites where anyone with a web
browser can go and find the location of his car, and wanted me to "reassure"
him that it was an April Fools joke.
Sadly, I couldn't. (Actually, the "sadly" part is
inaccurate... I look on my job as a teacher to be informing the uninformed,
so I always relish an opportunity to share knowledge, -- except when
knowledge is copyrighted, of course! wink wink ;-)
I invited him to my office and together we found
four different sites showing his car's current location, along with various
other information that seemed to genuinely surprise him.
These sites very greatly in terms of which systems
they cover, how much information they offer, what bells and whistles the
sites offer, and so forth, but most of them have position reports that are
only a few minutes old. Of course, most of these systems transmit only when
the car is on or moving, so some of the position reports appear to be old,
but it is because the car was turned off shortly after the last position was
transmitted. For example, my friend's last position report was transmitted
over an hour before we saw it, because his car had been sitting off in the
parking lot for that long! (Yes, the sites show the date and time (to the
second) that the last position was transmitted.)
One of my personal favorites is the "Find-U"
website, which not only shows the location of the vehicle on a map, but also
--- hey, hey, hey! --- shows a recent satellite photograph of the location!
And yes, usually you can zoom down to where you can see the individual cars.
For example, to find out the location of my friend
Ed Good's pickup truck, go to: http://snipurl.com/dv5v
Wait a minute or two for the server (maintained by
a medical doctor in the Florida Keys) to go out to the satellite website and
match up Ed's latitude and longitude with the correct and most current
satellite image of the area. Your browser will show the location on a map at
the top of the screen... scroll down and you'll see the satellite image-- it
takes about 30 seconds or so to retrieve the latest satellite image.
To find the location of my friend Jason
Armentrout's company car, go to:
http://snipurl.com/dv5x
TO find the location of my friend Jeff Rinehart's
Impala, go to:
http://snipurl.com/dv5y
I have a friend Don Landes who drives a big rig
truck across the country. If you want to see where his rig is at the moment,
go to:
http://snipurl.com/dv5z
But if you want to see a map of where his truck's
been over the last 10 days, go to: http://snipurl.com/dv60
(The little dots out in the Atlantic are anamolous...
they are where the location transmission packet was somehow garbled...)
(I've used snipurl because some of these URLs get
pretty long and when they wrap around to the next line, people email me
complaining their link doesn't work... another example of uninformed users
of technology...but honestly, I don't mind, that's why I'm a teacher!)
Ironic that this subject should come up today,
because yesterday, not 24 hours ago, I was showing my class some of the APRS
packets that we can receive in the classroom. I used a Radio Shack scanner
with the audio plugged into my sound card, and used a free public-domain
software package to decode the packets. (APRS packets are coded in AX.25
protocol, but the most of this software also decodes traditional TTY, Pactor,
Amtor FEC, Amtor ARQ, BPSK (several flavors), multi-FSK, among other coding
schemes and protocols. You can copy the highway patrol packets as they get
data on license plates delivered to their patrol car laptops, you can copy
the transmissions from the gas pumps to the station building before it gets
encrypted for satellite transmission to Visa/Mastercard, all kinds of neat
stuff.)
Of course, the Find-U website only publishes the
locations of APRS units (Automatic Position Reporting System), a system
designed by Bob Bruninga, professor of technology at the Naval Post-Graduate
School. And for all these systems and sites, you also have to know the
transmitter identifier programmed into the vehicle's transmitter. But hey,
that's not that hard to find, either... in fact, all of the above vehicles'
identification is available by looking up the owner's name and state on a
server located at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, as well as a
couple of dozen others all over the world. Even the FCC website will show
it, since these transmitters are licensed individually by the FCC and the
FCC data is, by law, public information!
(If you want more info on APRS, check out Bob
Bruninga's site:
http://web.usna.navy.mil/~bruninga/aprs.html
-- he has a great powerpoint presentation on-line that gives a lot of
information about the system... but be warned it is aimed at techies, radio
amateurs and enthusiasts, wireless experimenters, and their (our) ilk.
Now, let's get to the entertainment part:
Privacy? Giggle, giggle. Chuckle, Chuckle, guffaw.
Imagine this: you are sitting in the bleachers at Camden Yards Stadium in
Baltimore, section D, row 15, seat F, watching the Socks beat up on the
Orioles. During the seventh inning stretch, you stand up and bellow into a
bullhorn: Hey, everybody, I'm (insert your name) and I'm sitting in section
D, row 15, seat F.
Now, imagine that someone in section B hears you on
the bullhorn, writes down your seat location on a piece of paper, and holds
it up for those around him to see. Is this invading your privacy? Well,
that's exactly what these websites are doing. You are voluntarily installing
in your car a piece of technology which uses radio waves, tantamount to
shouting into a bullhorn, your identification and location. Those
transmissions are relayed over and over, across a host of terrestrial and
satellite repeating transmitters (the APRS system uses over a thousand
ground stations and at least six satellites, including a relay station
installed on the international space station! I'm NOT joking!), and everyone
within range of those satellites (generally at least half the earth at any
given time) can receive those transmissions.
So don't come to me crying about privacy. YOU are
the one shouting into the bullhorn. You are the one using public airwaves to
broadcast (yes, broadcast) your car's position every two minutes.
The only problem that exists is that marketers
forget to remind their customers about the nature of radio waves. And most
Americans slept through their high school physics class when this stuff was
being taught (it has been taught since the 1920s!). Radio waves travel to
the edge of the universe. Sure, they may eventually become so faint as to
become indistinguishable from background noise with today's state of the art
receivers... but if we can detect Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft several
times further away than Pluto, surely we can hear your bullhorn giving out
your location every two minutes from a satellite only 50 miles up.
Privacy? Still in your bedroom. Perhaps. To some
small extent. For now.
I asked my students last semester to try to count
the number of cameras they see in plain sight in a one-hour period, anywhere
they choose, from the showers in the locker room to the line at McDonalds.
The highest was 37, the lowest was 8. Eight cameras in one hour, watching
you, as the LOWEST number, when students began looking for them.
So anyone who believes that "privacy" still exists
outside their own bedroom is fooling only themselves and those who want to
still put their heads in the sand instead of looking around and recognizing
the reality of modern 21st century life. If you will wake up and smell the
coffee and RECOGNIZE your environment, you can begin behaving accordingly,
and life will be just as fine, just as good, just as pleasant, just as
relaxed, and probably even of higher quality that it was back when you were
blissfully ignorant.
But if you want to act like one of the many, many
old fossilized fuddy-duddies, deny the realities of modern life, pretend
like we can "go back to the way things used to be", cry "help, help, there
oughta be a law", you will continue to provide mirth, entertainment, and
laughs to those who are able to adapt.
(I'm still waiting for the world to come to its
senses and put an end to the ridiculous (and mostly avoidable) practice of
identity theft. We have numerous technologies we can bring to bear to
increase the difficulty of stealing one's identity (WHICH by the way is NOT
the same as obtaining one's personal information, in spite of Chicken
Littles who would have you believe it is), but too many ostriches have
"voiced concerns" about unlikely (and in many cases, nonexistent)
possibilities which drown out the obvious advantages of eliminating what is
seen by most people as a real problem.)
Darwin supposedly once said, "Survival of the
fittest doesn't mean survival of the strongest. It means survival of those
most able to adapt."
So adapt already.
Technology has its drawbacks, sure, and I don't
deny that those drawbacks cause problems. But people who are informed of the
drawbacks can adapt, rather than futilely trying to turn back the clock,
stifle innovation, curtail progress, and yes, abridge liberties (liberty to
invent, to experiment, and even the liberty to disseminate knowledge of
observable facts, such as a photo of what your house looks like from any
airplane!).
I'm exaggerating for effect, of course, and writing
a diatribe that sounds downright scolding. But my adamant tone is purely for
your entertainment, so you can post a rebuttal. (Since Luddites entertain
me, it's only fair that I reciprocate, and give them some entertainment,
too, isn't it? Look on me as the Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly, or Howard
Stern of the AECM techno set! Lots of your fellow AECM'ers already do!)
But seriously... my only intent is to try to
enlighten, educate, and let people know that they can't keep on pretending
that life is like it used to be. Technological progress is accelerating, and
will keep on accelerating, and we can't stop it. Individual citizens over my
lifetime have lost the luxury of the old, slow-paced, self-guided lifestyle
my grandfather could choose if he wanted, and instead we are required to
keep abreast of everything from seat belt laws, new icons on our car
dashboards and street signs, new devices from hotel doorlocks to iPods to
cellphone cameras, and on and on. We have to stay abreast of this stuff if
we want to continue interacting with our fellow beings at a level sufficient
to prevent us from being labelled hermits. We can either learn about what's
going on around us, or we can moan and groan about how bad change is and beg
futilely for the ride to slow down because we are getting dizzy. (Notice:
the next generation isn't dizzy! They love the roller coaster and want it to
go faster! And they will prevail... I assure you, they will prevail.)
And if you really want to elicit a laugh, tell
somebody "There oughta be a law". Unlike accounting rules, the laws of
physics can't be (yet) legislated by the winners of November popularity
contests. As they say, if you outlaw listening to radio waves, only outlaws
will listen to radio waves. Even if the U.S. outlawed sites such as Find-U
and all the rest, the radio waves can still be heard in Finland, Israel,
Romania, North Korea, and even on the moon! So, as my post's subject title
says, Get Real.
Old geezers, unite. At least we can still complain
about moral issues such as open promotion of homosexuality, loss of ethics
in the boardroom, fundamentalist zealots, and political intrigue. Let's sit
around on the park bench and reminisce about the way things used to be. "I
remember way back when you could take a leak in the woods without having
your picture appear on the six o'clock news!" "Oh yeah? Well, I remember
when you could buy a loaf of bread without getting six tons of junk mail
inviting you to buy the competing brand of bread!" "I can top that! I
remember when you could drive your girlfriend out to the beach to watch the
midnight submarine races without your daddy knowing where the car was!" "Noooo!
Really? You can remember that far back?" "Yep. OF course, maybe my mind is
playin' tricks on me again..."
David Fordham Offerer of Unique Incites
(spelling deliberate)
March 25, 2005 message from David Albrecht [albrecht@PROFALBRECHT.COM]
I have started writing my own homework problems. This
means that I don't rely on what is on the textbook, and the solutions manual
becomes irrelevant. Lately, the mix of homework problems is about 60% of ones
I've written, 40% from the textbook.
This way, I have complete control over the issues
that I want students to work on. Sometimes I'll have a sequence of problems
that systematically guide students as they grow their understanding.
As for "grading" homework? I never do it,
at least as a component of the course grade. I like to have two or three
rounds of students doing formative work (and receiving my feedback), before I
ever think of some sort of summative evaluation. Some of the formative work
(and feedback) can be done in class, some can be done outside of class (as in
homework). Recent research is confirming that in-class formative work is a
very powerful part of the student learning process.
Some of the formative exercises and my feedback occur
in class:
(1) a two minute written exercise at the beginning of
class (or the end of class). It could be a couple of multiple choice
questions.
(2) a prepared sheet of short examples for students
to work on at designated times in class. I find it is more effective when I
permit students to compare answers and teach their friends before I restart
class and make my own comments.
(3) my working problems up front, but requiring all
students to be crunching numbers as we go through a problem
(4) my selecting a student to be the teacher (up
front) for a 3-5 minute portion of the class. This might involve in a student
commenting on a process or topic, or it might involve them working a specific
homework exercise or problem.
(5) having students choose one of their own to be the
teacher for 3-5 minute of the class, etc.
(6) having students participate in simple simulations
where they have to create the data and then account for it
(7) requiring students to ask good questions or to
provide answers to my questions. Lately, I have required their participation
during at least one-third of the class meetings. Participation should not be a
"graded" component of a course unless you can accurately identify,
observe and record the student participation. This requires a video recording
of the class.
(8) having students throw the "you are
volunteered" ball. Whoever the ball is thrown to is the next student to
ask a question or provide an answer to my question
There are so many more activities that can be used,
why I've even thought of two new ones during the time I've written this note.
Anyone who is making (or has made) a transition from a teacher-centered
classroom to a learning centered classroom will recognize these techniques.
Basically, the emphasis is on students learning by doing. This means there
isn't that much time for students to learn by listening to the instructor's
power point lecture.
I find these activities to work very well in
undergraduate classes. I frequently teach intermediate accounting, less
frequently teach managerial or financial principles. This year I'm taking a
turn at cost accounting.
David Albrecht
Bowling Green State University
March 25, 2005 reply from Van Johnson
[accvej@LANGATE.GSU.EDU]
I am reminded of an accounting professor I know who
won their University's highest teaching award very early in her career. Each
recipient of the award was required to write an essay regarding their
teaching philosophy. There were truly insightful essays on active learning
and on other impressive approaches.
Still, the essay that made the most sense to me was
from the colleague in my department. The theme was, in educating students,
find what works for you.
I have seen brilliant lecturers who held students
rapt. (I think most of us can identify a "lecturer" from our past studies
who was important in our development) The brilliant lecturer was not nearly
as successful at leading exercises in discovery learning.
Similarly, I have seen professors whose lecture
skills were not very good. . . .but they had a remarkable knack for
creatively working with smaller groups of students (in class) and guiding
them towards the discovery of a concept.
Find what works for you. Don't lazily continue to
drone on in lecture if you could use another (perhaps more effortful)
approach to get students excited. And if your students are excited by what
you do now, don't be forced by educational idealogues (who fortunately do
not appear to contribute to this forum) to change to some other approach.
Stay awake (like David), stay involved (like
David), experiment (perhaps you are better at some approaches than you
think, and perhaps they are more rewarding than you imagine), but
ultimately, find the approach that best allows you educate your students
(like David).
The soon to be retired
Van Johnson
Asst. Prof Georgia State University
A quote from Katherine
After months of government investigations of
financial-engineering products in the insurance industry, the nation's
accounting rule makers said they will consider tightening standards that govern
how companies account for their dealings with insurance companies. The Financial
Accounting Standards Board yesterday voted unanimously to add a project to its
agenda aimed at clarifying when contracts structured as insurance policies
actually transfer risk from the policies' buyers, and when they don't. The
FASB's decision is an acknowledgment that the current accounting rules for the
insurance industry in many respects are porous. "We've got a specific problem
that's been brought to our attention in which there are allegations that the
accounting is not representationally faithful and not comparable," said
Katherine Schipper, a member of the FASB, the private-sector body that sets
generally accepted accounting principles. "So we need to craft a solution that
addresses that specific set of allegations."
Diya Gullapalli, "FASB Weighs Its Finite-Risk Rules: Accounting Body to
Start By Defining 'Insurance Risk'; Changes Could Take Years, The Wall Street
Journal, April 7, 2005; Page C3
After months of government investigations of
financial-engineering products in the insurance industry, the nation's
accounting rule makers said they will consider tightening standards that
govern how companies account for their dealings with insurance companies.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board yesterday
voted unanimously to add a project to its agenda aimed at clarifying when
contracts structured as insurance policies actually transfer risk from the
policies' buyers, and when they don't. The FASB's decision is an
acknowledgment that the current accounting rules for the insurance industry
in many respects are porous.
"We've got a specific problem that's been brought
to our attention in which there are allegations that the accounting is not
representationally faithful and not comparable," said Katherine Schipper, a
member of the FASB, the private-sector body that sets generally accepted
accounting principles. "So we need to craft a solution that addresses that
specific set of allegations."
In recent years, many companies are believed to
have used structured insurance-industry products to burnish their financial
statements. The FASB's current standards don't define even basic concepts
like "insurance contract" and "insurance risk." FASB members said that
defining those terms will be their first order of business as they tackle
the project. For years, the lack of clarity over what qualifies for
insurance accounting, combined with lax public-disclosure requirements, made
it fairly easy for companies to interpret the rules aggressively without
fear of attracting scrutiny by outside investors.
The accounting for "finite-risk" reinsurance
policies is at the heart of regulators' investigations at a host of
insurance companies, including American International Group Inc. and MBIA
Inc. These nontraditional insurance products blend elements of insurance and
financing. To qualify for more-favorable insurance accounting, policies must
transfer sufficient risk of loss to a seller from a buyer. Regulators have
contended that, in some cases, finite-risk policies appear more akin to
loans.
FASB members debated several approaches yesterday.
Possibilities include enhancing disclosure rules, issuing new guidance in a
question-and-answer format, and amending one of the key standards on risk
transfer in reinsurance contracts, known as Financial Accounting Standard
113. Formally amending FAS 113 could require months or years of work,
however.
The subject of risk transfer also is under review
by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, whose members are
the insurance industry's chief regulators. In addition, the London-based
International Accounting Standards Board and the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission's staff are considering issuing new guidance on
accounting for finite-risk reinsurance. With the IASB also in the kitchen,
Michael Crooch, an FASB board member, wonders if the FASB's work on the
matter will be "seen at least across the pond as the FASB meddling or
getting ahead of them."
The least likely scenario would be for the FASB to
adopt what, until recently, had been a widely used rule of thumb in the
accounting and insurance industries for determining when risk is transferred
to an insurer. This held that risk is transferred when there is a 10% chance
of a 10% loss by an insurer or reinsurer. That industry guidepost --
developed largely because of the FASB's lack of guidance on the subject --
today is being frowned upon because of its arbitrariness and its openness to
abuse.
Large auditing firms are trying to stay on top of
finite-risk reinsurance rules, as well. On its internal Web site, for
example, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, which is AIG's outside auditor,
recently posted a 20-page summary for personnel and clients on accounting
issues surrounding these products. And at Grant Thornton LLP, the nation's
fifth-largest accounting firm, Chief Executive Ed Nusbaum said: "We're more
on the lookout for insurance transactions with these accounting issues."
April 7, 2005 reply from
escribne@nmsu.edu
Bob,
This looks relevant to your quote from Katherine Schipper.
Ed
"Accounting for the Abuses at AIG," Insurance
and Pensions at the Wharton School of Business," ---
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/index.cfm?fa=viewfeature&id=1180
Improper Use of Finite Policies
But in practice, finite policies have
sometimes been used improperly. In 2000 and
2001, AIG's Greenberg asked General Re to do
an unusual deal involving a bundle of finite
contracts General Re had written for
clients. AIG took over the obligation to pay
up to $500 million in claims on the
contracts. At the same time, General Re
passed to AIG $500 million in premiums the
clients had paid. AIG paid General Re a $5
million fee for moving these contracts to
AIG's books.
Last year, General Re reported the deal to
investigators who were questioning a number
of reinsurers about finite policies. This
deal carried a red flag because it was
backwards: Typically, it would be AIG
seeking a finite policy to shift risk to
General Re. Because the $500 million in
premiums had to be paid back to General Re,
AIG seemed to be losing money on the deal,
not making it. So why had Greenberg asked to
take over those contracts?
In accounting for the deal, AIG tallied the
premiums as $500 million in revenue and
applied that amount to its reserve funds
used to pay potential claims. This helped
satisfy shareholders who had been concerned
AIG did not have enough in reserve.
The issue in this deal, as in many finite
insurance contracts, is whether AIG was
providing insurance coverage or receiving a
loan. To be insurance, AIG would have to
assume a risk of loss. An industry rule of
thumb known as "10/10" says the insurer
should face, at a minimum, a 10% chance of
losing 10% of the policy amount for the
contract to be considered insurance.
In the absence of that degree of risk, the
premiums transferred from General Re to AIG,
and repayable later, would be a loan. AIG
would then not be able to count the $500
million in premiums as additional reserves,
as it had.
On March 30, AIG directors announced that:
"Based on its review to date, AIG has
concluded that the General Re transaction
documentation was improper and, in light of
the lack of evidence of risk transfer, these
transactions should not have been recorded
as insurance."
As a result, the company said it would
reduce its reserve figure by $250 million
and show that liabilities had increased by
$245 million. However, it added, these
changes would have "virtually no impact" on
the company's financial condition. Bottom
line: The AIG-General Re deal was an
accounting gimmick to make AIG's reserves
look healthier than they were -- an apparent
effort to deceive regulators, analysts and
shareholders.
More Cases of Questionable Accounting
The directors then surprised observers by
announcing they had uncovered a number of
additional cases of questionable accounting.
The most serious involved reinsurance
contracts AIG had taken with a Barbados
reinsurer, Union Excess, allowing AIG's risk
to pass to the other company and off AIG's
books. AIG found that Union did business
exclusively with AIG subsidiaries, and that
Union was partially owned by Starr
International Company Inc. (SICO), a large
AIG shareholder controlled by a board made
up of current and former AIG managers.
Hence, the AIG statement said, SICO could be
viewed as an AIG unit, or "consolidated
entity," and SICO's risks were therefore
actually AIG's. As a result, AIG had to
reduce its shareholders' equity by $1.1
billion.
Another case involved a Bermuda insurer,
Richmond Insurance Company, that the
directors found to be secretly controlled by
AIG. A third concerned Capco Reinsurance
Company, another Barbados insurer, and
"involved an improper structure created to
recharacterize underwriting losses as
capital losses," the directors said. Fixing
this meant listing Capco as a consolidated
entity and converting $200 million in
capital losses to underwriting losses.
Yet another case involved $300 million in
income AIG improperly claimed for selling
outside investors covered calls on bonds in
AIG's portfolio. Covered calls are supposed
to give their owners the option to buy bonds
at a set price for a given period, but AIG
used other derivatives transactions to
assure it could retain the bonds.
The directors also stated that certain debts
owed to AIG might be unrecoverable,
resulting in after-tax charges of $300
million. And they noted that the company was
revising accounting for deferred acquisition
costs and other expenses involving some AIG
subsidiaries, resulting in as much as $370
million in corrections.
Some of the revelations seemed eerily
similar to ones raised in the Enron case,
which included use of little known offshore
subsidiaries to hide liabilities, although
the scale of the abuse so far appears to be
far smaller at AIG.
The scandal highlights one of the dilemmas
of American accounting, says
Catherine M. Schrand, professor of
accounting at Wharton. "We have
one-size-fits-all accounting for firms in
this country. If the standard-setters try to
make it too specific and take out all the
gray areas, then they would have a problem
creating financial statements that are
relevant."
The degree of risk assumed by a company that
takes out a finite insurance policy is
difficult to measure, so it may not be
absolutely clear, even to the most well
intentioned accountant, whether the policy
should be counted as insurance or a loan.
Companies like AIG are so big, and their
accounting so complex, that it's impossible
to write regulations to prevent all abuse,
Strand suggests. "They will just find
another way to do it.... Flexibility gives
companies the opportunity to make their
financial statements better. But it also
gives them the opportunity to abuse the
rules."
|
|
|
|
Bob Jensen's threads on the insurance industry
accounting scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
A Profile of the American High School Sophomore in 2002
---
http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005338.pdf
March 29, 2005 message from College HQ
I took a look at your site a couple of hours ago... and I want to tell you
that I'd really love to trade links with you. I think your site has some
really good stuff related to my site's topic of college and would be a great
resource for my visitors as it deals with some great aspects of college that
I'd like to give my visitors more information about.
In fact, I went ahead and added your site to my College HQ Resource
Directory at http://www.college-hq.com/sanantoniocollege
Is that OK with you?
Can I ask a favor? Will you give me a link back on your site? I'd really
appreciate you returning the favor.
Thanks and feel free to drop me an email if you'd like to chat more about
this.
Best wishes,
Clare http://www.college-hq.com
info@college-hq.com
P.S. When you do link back, there's some suggested code to use at http://www.college-hq.com/links/addlink.html
March 29, 2005 message from College HQ
[info@college-hq.com]
I took a look at your site a couple of hours ago...
and I want to tell you that I'd really love to trade links with you. I think
your site has some really good stuff related to my site's topic of college
and would be a great resource for my visitors as it deals with some great
aspects of college that I'd like to give my visitors more information about.
In fact, I went ahead and added your site to my
College HQ Resource Directory at
http://www.college-hq.com/sanantoniocollege
Is that OK with you?
Can I ask a favor? Will you give me a link back on
your site? I'd really appreciate you returning the favor.
Thanks and feel free to drop me an email if you'd
like to chat more about this.
Best wishes,
Clare
http://www.college-hq.com
info@college-hq.com
P.S. When you do link back, there's some suggested code to use at
http://www.college-hq.com/links/addlink.html
March 29 reply from Bob Jensen
Hi Clare,
I added your College-HQ site to my college finder site
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#Scholarships
I will also include it in the next edition of New
Bookmarks ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookurl.htm
National Institutes of Health: History of Medicine ---
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/
Includes books, reports, pictures, videos, etc.
Vanderbilt University: Bioimages ---
http://www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/index.htm
Center for History of Physics --- http://www.aip.org/history/index.html
The Jewish Virtual Library
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/index.html
Bob Jensen's history bookmarks are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#History
Question
What is the meaning of "verified by Ernst &
Young?"
Answer
Assurance Report on Page 84 ---
http://www.abnamro.com/com/about/sd/sd.jsp
Engagement and responsibilities
We have received the assurance engagement to review the Sustainability Report
2004 of
ABN AMRO Holding N.V. (ABN AMRO). The scope of this report and the reporting
principles,
including any inherent limitations that could affect the reliability of
information, are set
out on page 82 and 83 of the report. This report is the responsibility of the
management of
ABN AMRO. Our responsibility is to express an independent opinion on the
accuracy and
adequacy of this report. A review is aimed at obtaining a moderate level of
assurance for our
conclusions. The extent of evidence-gathering procedures is less than that for
an audit and
therefore a review provides less assurance than an audit.
Scope of work performed
We conducted our review in accordance with the standard for assurance
engagements
generally accepted in the Netherlands, as issued by the International Federation
of
Accountants and the Royal Netherlands Institute of Registered Accountants (Royal
NIVRA).
Our principal review procedures were:
• Obtaining an understanding of the sector and its relevant social
responsibility issues
• Assessing the acceptability of the reporting principles used and significant
estimates and
calculations made in preparing the Sustainability Report 2004
• Performing analytical procedures at both Group and (S)BU level to assess the
quantitative data
• Examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the descriptive and
quantitative data
provided and studying relevant company documents
• Conducting interviews with the responsible company officers, mainly for the
purpose of
assessing the plausibility of the descriptive and quantitative data in the
Sustainability Report
2004
• Evaluating the overall view of the Sustainability Report 2004, in part by
testing its contents
against the reporting guidelines set out in the Sustainability Reporting
Guideline issued by
the Council for Annual Reporting in the Netherlands and the guidelines issued by
the Global
Reporting Initiative.
Conclusions
Based on the procedures performed, nothing came to our attention that leads us
not to
believe that:
• the description of policy and measures in the Sustainability Report 2004 of
ABN AMRO
properly reflects the efforts made in 2004 and
• the quantitative data included in the Sustainability Report 2004 of ABN AMRO
are free of
material misstatement.
Bob Jensen's threads on assurance services are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm
April 5, 2005 message from Dennis Beresford
[dberesfo@TERRY.UGA.EDU]
The SEC recently released an interesting memo from
its Office of Economic Analysis to the Chief Accountant on economic
valuation of stock options. It is available at:
http://www.sec.gov/interps/account/secoeamemo032905.pdf
The memo concludes that valuing employee stock
options under new FASB Statement 123R is "not unusual" and is quite similar
to valuations done in other areas of accounting and finance. This seems to
deflate the arguments of some within the business community who continue to
assert that employee stock options are too hard to value. The memo footnotes
several academic studies from both accounting and finance scholars in
supporting its findings.
Denny Beresford
Bob Jensen's threads on employee stock options are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/theory/sfas123/jensen01.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on valuation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/roi.htm
Message forwarded a Trinity University faculty member on
March 24, 2005
-----Original Message-----
From: AABT Science and Pseudoscience
To: PSEUDOSCIENCE@LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: Fw: [evol-psych] Scientific American apologizes for Darwinist
bias! An upcoming* Scientific American editorial:
OK, We Give Up ----------------------
"There's no easy way to admit this. For years,
helpful letter writers told us to stick to science. They pointed out that
science and politics don't mix. They said we should be more balanced in our
presentation of such issues as creationism, missile defense and global
warming. We resisted their advice and pretended not to be stung by the
accusations that the magazine should be renamed Unscientific American, or
Scientific Unamerican, or even Unscientific Unamerican. But spring is in the
air, and all of nature is turning over a new leaf, so there's no better time
to say: you were right, and we were wrong.
In retrospect, this magazine's coverage of socalled
evolution has been hideously one-sided. For decades, we published articles in
every issue that endorsed the ideas of Charles Darwin and his cronies. True,
the theory of common descent through natural selection has been called the
unifying concept for all of biology and one of the greatest scientific ideas
of all time, but that was no excuse to be fanatics about it.
Where were the answering articles presenting the
powerful case for scientific creationism? Why were we so unwilling to suggest
that dinosaurs lived 6,000 years ago or that a cataclysmic flood carved the
Grand Canyon? Blame the scientists. They dazzled us with their fancy fossils,
their radiocarbon dating and their tens of thousands of peer-reviewed journal
articles. As editors, we had no business being persuaded by mountains of
evidence.
Moreover, we shamefully mistreated the Intelligent
Design (ID) theorists by lumping them in with creationists. Creationists
believe that God designed all life, and that's a somewhat religious idea. But
ID theorists think that at unspecified times some unnamed superpowerful entity
designed life, or maybe just some species, or maybe just some of the stuff in
cells. That's what makes ID a superior scientific theory: it doesn't get
bogged down in details.
Good journalism values balance above all else. We owe
it to our readers to present everybody's ideas equally and not to ignore or
discredit theories simply because they lack scientifically credible arguments
or facts. Nor should we succumb to the easy mistake of thinking that
scientists understand their fields better than, say, U.S. senators or
best-selling novelists do. Indeed, if politicians or special-interest groups
say things that seem untrue or misleading, our duty as journalists is to quote
them without comment or contradiction. To do otherwise would be elitist and
therefore wrong. In that spirit, we will end the practice of expressing our
own views in this space: an editorial page is no place for opinions.
Get ready for a new Scientific American. No more
discussions of how science should inform policy. If the government commits
blindly to building an anti-ICBM defense system that can't work as promised,
that will waste tens of billions of taxpayers' dollars and imperil national
security, you won't hear about it from us. If studies suggest that the
administration's antipollution measures would actually increase the dangerous
particulates that people breathe during the next two decades, that's not our
concern. No more discussions of how policies affect science either. So what if
the budget for the National Science Foundation is slashed? This magazine will
be dedicated purely to science, fair and balanced science, and not just the
science that scientists say is science. And it will start on April Fools' Day.
"
Okay, We Give Up
MATT COLLINS THE EDITORS editors@sciam.com COPYRIGHT
2005 SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, INC."
* The _April_ issue, to be specific
Reply
from Bob Jensen on March 25, 2005
Do you have any idea why this editorial
would be published? The title claims
they are “giving up.” Who are
they surrendering to? Assorted
readers who wrote letters of complaint could not in and of themselves be the
reason for a change in editorial policy unless they represented a huge silent
majority or some respected scientists themselves. I
hardly suspect that the majority of current subscribers objected to most of the
past editorials.
In every case this editorial is
dysfunctional to the change in policy that it announces.
Subscribers who complain about the former policy are going to be further
turned off by this editorial. Potential
subscribers who might be attracted due to the new policy are going to be totally
turned off if they discover this editorial.
And scientists themselves who objected to unwarranted extrapolations in
prior editorials are going to scoff at this editorial.
It would seem that this editorial appeals
only to readers who prefer the old editorial policy and will be turned off by
the new policy itself.
Hence it would seem to me that the
editorial is dysfunctional from all sides of the issue of editorial policy.
At a minimum the editorial should give genuine reasons why the policy has
been changed instead of whining about having to change it without giving the
real reasons why it is going to be changed.
I can hardly believe that a relatively
small number of letters of complaint are the real reasons for the changed
editorial policy. Some powerful
readers must’ve complained. Could
they be scientists themselves?
The title claims they are “giving up.”
Who are they surrendering to?
Bob
Jensen
It's all an April Fool's
joke, and I'm the fool!
March 25, 2005 message from Robert Blystone
[rblyston@trinity.edu]
Carolyn Becker called our attention yesterday to an
editorial that is to appear in the April Scientific American. Depending on
one's point of view, the Sciam editors have thrown in the towel and seen the
light; or perhaps in frustration, offer a Lilliputian parody. Calling
Jonathan Swift to mind is perhaps a good thing in this case, for one might
suggest that the creationists through the guise of Intelligent Design (ID)
might fit well into book three of Gulliver's Travels. As has been already
pointed out, the timing of the Sciam editorial with an April first
publication date may be pertinent.
I would like to call attention to several resources
that place into context the debate between the Intelligently Designed
Creationists (IDC) and the sacred fraternal order of the Scientific
Method. The first of two attached pdf files is taken from an article that
appeared in the publication Natural History three years ago. It is a point
counterpoint between the IDC and the better speakers for the established
scientific community representing evolution. It is a quality read that you
might consider. The web site for the pdf was
http://www.actionbioscience.org/evolution/nhmag.html
Palestine: The People and the Land
---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8B6EB4AA-E7C3-49AC-9F3E-A70603635511.htm
April 2005 report from the U.S.
Department of Transportation ---
http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/reports/2005/0504atcr.doc
NUMBER OF
AIRPORTS
REPORTED |
PERCENT OF
ARRIVALS
ON TIME D/ |
NUMBER OF
AIRPORTS
REPORTED |
HAWAIIAN
AIRLINES S/V/ |
7 |
83.6 |
SKYWEST
AIRLINES S/ |
15 |
82.3 |
ATA
AIRLINES S/ |
16 |
82.1 |
AMERICAN
AIRLINES S/ |
32 |
80.0 |
UNITED
AIRLINES S/ |
32 |
80.3 |
SOUTHWEST
AIRLINES S/ |
17 |
79.0 |
COMAIR S/ |
23 |
78.9 |
AMERICAN
EAGLE AIRLINES S/ |
23 |
79.0 |
INDEPENDENCE AIR * |
11 |
80.8 |
CONTINENTAL
AIRLINES S/ |
30 |
76.8 |
DELTA
AIRLINES S/ |
33 |
75.8 |
NORTHWEST
AIRLINES S/ |
32 |
76.3 |
AMERICA
WEST AIRLINES S/ |
29 |
75.8 |
EXPRESSJET
AIRLINES S/ |
25 |
72.5 |
ALASKA
AIRLINES S/ |
16 |
75.6 |
US AIRWAYS
S/ |
27 |
73.6 |
JETBLUE
AIRWAYS S/ |
14 |
72.0 |
AIRTRAN
AIRWAYS S/ |
20 |
68.4 |
ATLANTIC
SOUTHEAST AIRLINES S/ |
20 |
64.8 |
|
Forwarded by Miklos on April 8, 2005
Guarding the Guards:
Rethinking the PCAOB Review Function
Miklos Vasarhelyi
Michael Alles
Alexander Kogan
Rutgers Business School
In August the PCAOB released the
first set of reviews of audit firms as mandated by the Sarbanes/Oxley Act,
comprising an examination of 16 engagements from each of the Big 4 audit
firms. While fault was found with each firm (with E&Y being a clear negative
outlier), the errors were relatively minor, either being immaterial
departures from GAAP, or the failure to perform certain tests. But in no
case was the previously determined audit opinion affected by the review, a
not surprising result given that the samples were taken from engagements
that had already gone through the firms own review processes. The PCAOB
stated in advance that the 2004 reviews would not be as comprehensive or
thorough as ones it will conduct in the future. Thus in 2005 the Big 4 (who
are required to be reviewed annually) will see some 500 of their engagements
reviewed, while the PCAOB will also begin the required triennial review of
smaller audit firms, with some 150 subject to examination.
Given this ambitious agenda, it is
time to stop and consider what the best use that the PCAOB can make of the
power is granted to it to conduct reviews of the audit industry. The reviews
are conducted by auditors drawn from the same firms as the ones they are
reviewing, trained in the same traditional methodologies and one has to fear
that this will lead to a failure in imagination and innovation in how the
PCAOB conceives of the role of the review process.
Thus, evidently the PCAOB feels
that the main instrument it should rely on are sample engagement audits,
which will then help pinpoint failures in the audit firm’s procedures and
policies. The engagement focused approach can certainly lead to some useful
information about how the audit firms are operating, but how much is learned
clearly depends on how the sample is chosen. Engagements that are subject of
firm review are that are inherently problematic and high risk, but it is a
good question whether the majority of audit failures are with such
engagements since they are already subject to closer scrutiny. An astute
manager might feel that the best candidates for fraud are precisely in those
quiet, routine accounts that are considered too dull for an auditor to worry
too much about—consider that the misrepresentation of expenses as assets at
WorldCom far exceeded the total liability at Enron with its sexy SPEs.
Inspecting engagements will help
firm do those engagements better, but the approach is not explicitly
designed to improve the 95% of audits that will not be inspected, and
provides no protection for the industry if one of those unexamined
engagements ends in a spectacular failure. By contrast, consider the basis
of Section 404 of the Sarbanes/Oxley Act which requires managers to certify
as to the effectiveness of the company’s controls over the preparation of
financial reports with the auditor then attesting to the certification. A
glaring absence in the Sarbanes/Oxley regulatory framework is a 404 type
requirement on audit firms themselves with regard to the controls on their
audit engagements. The PCAOB can potentially fill that gap by focusing its
review on the audit firms control systems rather than almost exclusively on
actual engagements. The point is to help the firm improve how it does an
audit in the first place rather than to catch a badly done one. The
preventive rather than corrective approach underlies Total Quality Control
and there is no reason why those principles long used in American
manufacturing cannot be applied to auditing.
A justification for an inspection
regime is to serve as a deterrent to badly conducted audits, an approach
that may appeal to a public burned by the Andersen meltdown. But deterrent
only works if it is credible and one has to seriously question whether the
Big 4 firms are now too large to fail, meaning that the PCAOB is constrained
in how hard it can come down on these audit firms even when a review finds a
serious flaw in an engagement. If the PCAOB realistically cannot de-register
one of the Big 4, or even publicly reveal enough information that could lead
to a crippling lawsuit, then what is gained from these inspections? It is
equivalent to an audit in which both the auditor and the manager knows that
at the end of the day a qualified opinion will not be issued. In these
circumstances a better approach may be to act explicitly like an internal
rather than an external auditor, focusing on improving the audit process and
helping prevent problems rather than catching errors that have already
occurred.
Another credibility problem with
the inspection regime proposed by the PCAOB is whether, given the staff and
resources at the PCAOB’s disposal, expanding the sample size almost tenfold
will result in more or less thorough reviews of each engagement than the
rather shallow examinations in 2004. What is noteworthy about the proposed
review process is that it is little different in substance from the old and
reviled peer review system that it replaced, despite the fact that the PCAOB
has far more legal authority to demand access and cooperation from the firm
and its documentation than the peer reviewers ever did. That is an
indication of the fundamental problem with the PCAOB approach, that it is
simply trying to do the old peer reviews better rather than starting from
scratch and asking what is the optimal method of assuring auditing.
Such a reengineering approach would
surely begin with technology, which when allied with the new requirements
for comprehensive documentation by both firm and auditor (“if it isn’t in
writing, it doesn’t exist.”) can potentially lead to the creation of a vast
depository of digitized audits. Sophisticated audit tools can then be
applied against this dataset to provide real time monitoring of audit
procedures and to develop models of emerging audit failures.
This approach would also enable the PCAOB to take advantage of a major new
capability that it potentially has, the ability to benchmark across audit
firms and to find both discrepancies and best practices. What the PCAOB
ideally needs is a monitoring system, as real time as possible,
incorporating a large set of business rules based on statistical analysis
that calls attention not to unhealthy high audit risk firms but to profiles
of audit failure, and which would issue alarms as audit failures are
occurring rather than after an opinion has been issued.
Finally, recall that an auditor
checks whether a firm has prepared income in accordance with GAAP, but the
auditor is not responsible for developing GAAP itself. By contrast, the
PCAOB both audits auditors and now also has the duty to develop audit
standards. This suggests that reviews have to provide a mechanism to
understand and improve the way in which auditing takes place, something
which cannot happen if the reviews use traditional methodologies to
perpetuate the current system. The PCAOB needs to rethink how a properly
configured audit review system, imaginatively using the latest information
technology, can be part of a systematic continuous improvement process that
leads to audits that better serve the needs of financial markets and
shareholders.
The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)
unveiled a new Information Technology (IT) community Web site that contains
resources, tools and guidance for CPAs interested or practicing in IT ---
http://infotech.aicpa.org/
Technology is the great enabler and one of the most
powerful forces of change. Ever evolving and dynamic, technology touches
much of what we do as CPAs. CPAs are able to utilize and leverage technology
in ways that add value to clients, customers, and employers. The AICPA
supports technology and technology-enabled services to improve business
objectives and decision-making processes, including: business application
processes, system integrity, knowledge management, system security, and the
integration of new business processes and practices.
Bob Jensen's helpers for accounting software are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#AccountingSoftware
April 4, 2004 message from James L. Morrison
[morrison@unc.edu]
The April/May 2005 issue of Innovate is now
available at http://www.innovateonline.info
Innovate is a peer-reviewed, bimonthly e-journal published as a public
service by the Fischler School of Education and Human Services at Nova
Southeastern University. It features creative practices and cutting-edge
research on the use of information technology to enhance education.
We open the issue with an important query from Glenn Russell: What are the
effects of distance in time and space on affective relationships between
teachers and students? Distancing lessens sensitivity to the emotional
states of others and can prevent educators from responding to students'
boredom, frustration, low motivation, or anxiety. Russell argues that
high-bandwidth synchronous communication, including visual and aural
feedback, can help educators better understand their students' needs.
Joel Foreman and Roy Jenkins focus on one technology that may alleviate the
distancing effect. Web conferencing systems (Webcons) include live audio and
video while providing the conveniences that educators have come to expect
from course management systems. Foreman and Jenkins enumerate the activities
that Webcons make possible and discuss the financial resources required to
bring them to the online classroom.
Susan LaCour describes a future in which portal systems provide students
with personalized information; integrated platforms offer campus-wide
resources in a central online location; and ePortfolios give prospective
employers and institutions a complete portrait of a student's learning
history. These technologies enable students to take charge of their own
learning, thereby increasing their potential for personal and professional
success.
David Gibson describes the Semantic Web's (SW) redefinition of the Internet.
The SW is not merely a medium for accessing and sharing textual information;
it enables the dynamic interoperability of programs across the Web. By
unobtrusively gathering data related to a user's online activities, the SW
can provide personalized learning resources, guidance, and evaluation,
acting as a virtual teacher that is uniquely responsive to the needs of its
student.
The next two articles provide pedagogical tips and techniques for making
online learning more engaging for students and more rewarding for
instructors. Tisha Bender shows educators several online applications for
role playing, situating the time-tested technique in a virtual theater where
students collaboratively apply their knowledge and experiences, and then
critically analyze their own performances. Cleborne Maddux, Rhoda Cummings,
Leping Liu, and John Newman follow with a practical, step-by-step guide to
creating a well-organized online course. Their suggestions are particularly
appropriate for colleagues who are developing a Web-based course for the
first time.
Ed Klonoski presents a creative solution to the ubiquitous budgetary woes
that frequently block technology purchases. Klonoski outlines Connecticut's
recent acquisition of a statewide learning management system and provides
tips on how multiple institutions can collaborate on purchasing arrangements
that, in the end, will save them thousands of dollars on sophisticated
software.
Finally, in his "Places to Go" column, Stephen Downes introduces readers to
the New York Public Library's Digital Gallery-an online repository that
contains more than 270,000 images from the library's archives. The Gallery
offers users convenient browsing capabilities as well as background
information on each image and bibliographic listings for further research.
Other libraries have launched similar sites, paving the way for archival
exploration at the click of a mouse.
Please forward this announcement to appropriate mailing lists and to
colleagues who want to use IT tools to advance their work.
Many thanks.
Jim
----
James L. Morrison
Editor-in-Chief, Innovate
http://www.innovateonline.info
Professor Emeritus of Educational Leadership UNC-Chapel Hill
http://horizon.unc.edu
Quotations
It is easy
to ask questions about technology; it is more difficult to ask the right
questions. Only by asking the right question will we get the right answer.
Diana Oblinger ---
http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm05211.asp
This is a nice and concise software review for
creating Web pages and Web sites
Click here to view the Comparison Chart. (pdf) ---
http://i.cmpnet.com/techlearning/archives/2005/03/05.03.Reviews_chart%20only.pdf
New Cell Phone Virus
Two weeks ago, antivirus companies
discovered
CommWarrior,
the first significant mobile-phone worm to be released "in
the wild." The previous phone viruses you might have heard
about were all pretty harmless.
Cabir,
which also made the news last month, uses Bluetooth to hop
from one phone to others physically nearby. As
Slate
explained,
that technique limits the virus's ability to spread
quickly—for Cabir to propagate, it has to be within 30 feet
of a vulnerable Bluetooth phone. CommWarrior is far more
contagious. When it invades your phone, the worm rifles
through your contacts list and mails a copy of itself to
victims as a "multimedia message." That's a classic
social-engineering trick: When a message comes from a
friend, you're much more likely to open it and get infected.
Besides passing itself along to the next guy, CommWarrior
doesn't do much. The virus' only payload is a flashing
message—"OTMOP03KAM HET!"—that translates as "No to brain-deads!"
in Russian.
Clive Thompson, "The Perfect Worm: Coming soon, a cell-phone
virus that will wreck your life," Slate, March 22,
2005 ---
http://slate.msn.com/id/2115118/ |
|
Is your university missing out
on an opportunity for a $1,000,000 science teacher?
Because the emphasis of the Hughes awards is on programs that
could be spread nationally, the impact may be seen soon on
campuses without their own “million dollar professors.” And if
you missed out last time, there’s a chance to join that elite
group. The institute is now
accepting
nominations for a second group of awards — again, up to 20
people will receive $1 million. For a good example of how $1
million can change things, talk to
Jo Handelsman,
a professor of plant pathology at the University of Wisconsin at
Madison. With her grant, she is focusing on two projects, both
of which involve evangelizing on new approaches to science
education that will be felt far from Madison. One project
involves changing how graduate students and postdocs learn to
teach, so that they start their careers with better techniques
than they experienced as undergraduates. The other project
involves an intense Madison seminar over the summer to help
teams of professors learn to revamp their introductory biology
courses.
Scott Jaschik, "A Scientific (Teaching) Revolution,"
Inside Higher Ed, March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/23/hughes
Education lags technology: "The enemy is us"
Meanwhile, we’ve reached a critical juncture in our
institutional commitments to educational technology. Advances in networking and
software design finally allow educators to do far more than merely automate the
traditional lecture course. Over the last several years, higher education
leaders have outfitted their campuses with fat pipelines and high-speed
connectivity. Increasingly, their students come to campus equipped with the
latest in commercially available PCs and laptops. Hard drives are bigger,
graphics accelerators speed up 3D image display, and faster processing chips
simulate real-world physics with relative ease.
Marilyn M. Lombardi, "Standing on the Plateau," EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40,
no. 2 (March/April 2005): 68–69 ---
http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm0528.asp
Education in the distant future
I believe we are headed to a more individualized and
learner-centered model of higher education. I envision students having a
voluminous menu of postsecondary education options and mixing and matching among
these options throughout their adult lives. I see the combination of brain
research and software development producing learning materials and pedagogical
methods geared to each student’s learning style. And I suspect the profusion of
learners choosing among the plentitude of postsecondary options, each offering
education in its own fashion, will cause those of us in higher education to
deemphasize degrees in favor of competencies. At the same time, I worry that
colleges and universities will be left out of these changes because our
governance processes are so slow and the new technologies represent such a sharp
departure from the notion of the personalized education of the ideal
college—described in 1871 by U.S. President (and Williams College alumnus) James
A. Garfield as having Mark Hopkins, the nineteenth-century president of Williams
College, on one end of a log and a student on the other.
Arthur Levine, "All That Glitters," EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40, no. 2
(March/April 2005): 8–9 ---
http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm0525.asp
Educators should place a higher priority on
interdisciplinary perspectives
In 1981, Boyer, who was then president of the Carnegie
Foundation, and Levine, who would become president of Teacher's College at
Columbia University, argued that educators place a higher priority on
interdisciplinary perspectives and move to more holistic teaching methods. They
asserted that intellectual and social forces were pushing faculty to become
narrowly committed to their core disciplines at the expense of undergraduate
education.
Rita Jordan, Professor and Head, Department of Management, U.S. Air Force
Academy, AACSB eNewsline ---
http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-4/Issue-3/dc-jordan.asp
Some accounting professors may want to dust
off their old green eyeshades
"We beg, we borrow, we steal, we grovel, we scour the
world" to find accountants with five-plus years of experience in public
accounting, says Mark Friedman, New York-based managing director and head of
U.S. experienced recruitment at PricewaterhouseCoopers. Hiring across the board
at the firm is running nearly 30% above the levels of last year, he says.
Recruiters estimate that pay is up 10% or more. The base salary for a junior
partner with 10 to 12 years' experience, one recruiter says, is $500,000.
Experienced team leaders can command 20% more than a year ago, as can those with
expertise in forensic accounting, in which accountants look for financial
missteps and figure out how to fix what went wrong.
Suzanne McGee, "CPA Recruitment Intensifies As Accounting Rules Evolve," The
Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2005; Page B6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111145137773485691,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Bob Jensen’s threads on accountancy careers are at
There is an apparent disconnect between the
culture of library organizations and that of Net Gen students
The University of Southern California’s Leavey Library
logged 1.4 million visits last year.1 That remarkable statistic illustrates how
much a library can become part of campus life if it is designed with genuine
understanding of the needs of Net Generation (Net Gen) students. This
understanding relates not just to the physical facility of the library but to
all of the things that a library encompasses: content, access, enduring
collections, and services. Libraries have been adjusting their collections,
services, and environments to the digital world for at least 20 years. Even
prior to ubiquitous use of the Internet, libraries were using technology for
access to scholarly databases, for circulation systems, and for online catalogs.
With the explosion of Internet technology, libraries incorporated a wide array
of digital content resources into their offerings; updated the network, wiring,
and wireless infrastructures of their buildings; and designed new virtual and
in-person services. However, technology has resulted in more modernization than
transformation. There is an apparent disconnect between the culture of library
organizations and that of Net Gen students. This chapter will explore how
libraries might better adapt to the needs of Net Gen students in a number of
specific areas.
"Net Generation Students and Libraries," by Joan K. Lippencott, EDUCAUSE
Review, vol. 40, no. 2 (March/April 2005)
You can forward your own slang
A monster online dictionary of the rich colourful
language we call slang... all from a British perspective, with new slang added
every month. If you are unable to immediately find the term you are looking for,
try the slang search. A short essay giving an outline of the parameters of this
site and brief information on slang can be accessed on the introduction page
---
http://www.peevish.co.uk/slang/index.htm
(Forwarded by David Coy)
Reducing pollution is a priority in China
A solar-energy collecting tube invented by a professor
at Tsinghua University could make solar power more practical. The glass vacuum
heat collector has an aluminum nitride coating that absorbs solar energy. Each
of the coating’s multiple layers absorbs a different wavelength of light,
turning it into heat. The collector can capture 50 to 60 percent of incoming
solar energy, which can then be used to heat water or air. Tsinghua has applied
for more than 30 patents on the device, which is already offered commercially in
China, Switzerland, Japan, and Germany. In another energy efficiency project,
the research group for clean-energy automobiles at the College of Automotive
Engineering at Shanghai Tongji University is developing what it calls the
“Chunhui” (or “Spring Sunlight”) series of cars, which have independent electric
drives for each of their four wheels. The Chunhui cars are powered by lithium
batteries and hydrogen fuel cells; their only emission is water vapor.
Elsie Chan, "China," MIT's Technology Review, April 2005 ---
http://www2.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/issue/feature_gp_china.asp?trk=nl
Also see "Nuclear Power Is the Answer To China's
Energy Needs ," by Canice Chan, The Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2005
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111144723579485592,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Just another day on the fraud beat
The Securities and Exchange Commission slapped Time
Warner Inc. with a $300 million fine, its second-biggest fine in history, and
issued a stinging rebuke of the company's conduct, capping a three-year
investigation into accounting practices at the media titan . . . The SEC
yesterday filed a complaint against Time Warner, at the same time it announced
the settlement, that charged Time Warner with overstating online advertising
revenue and the number of AOL's Internet subscribers, as well as aiding and
abetting three other securities frauds. It also charged Time Warner with
violating a cease-and-desist order against the America Online division issued in
2000. "Some of the misconduct occurred while the ink on a prior commission
cease-and-desist order was barely dry," said SEC Director of Enforcement Stephen
M. Cutler in a statement. "Such an institutional failure calls for strong
sanctions."
Julia Angwin, "SEC Fines Time Warner $300 Million," The Wall Street Journal,
March 22, 2005; Page A3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111142076929485150,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on revenue accounting are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm
Median GMAT scores in accredited institutions
---
http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/enewsline/Vol-4/Issue-3/dd-mediangmatchart.asp
It may no longer be based solely on merit at
Cal: Top finalists may not get scholarhips
Faculty committee at the University of California says
that the way the National Merit Scholarship Program chooses winners is unfair
and that its practice of giving scholarships regardless of need is "contrary to
U.C. standards and philosophy." Eligibility for merit scholarships is
determined solely by scores on the Preliminary SAT exam, formally the PSAT/NMSQT.
Of more than 1.3 million 11th-grade students who take the exam each year, about
16,000 are chosen as Merit semifinalists. The National Merit Scholarship
Corporation, a nonprofit company in Evanston, Ill., then uses student essays,
high school records, recommendations from school principals and scores from a
second test, the SAT, to reduce the pool to 15,000 finalists.
Karen W. Arenson, "Faculty Panel at Cal Faults Way to Pick Merit Scholars,"
The New York Times, March 22, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/22/education/22merit.html?oref=login
From the land of the not-so-free
Yet another battle in the ongoing war between Chinese
authorities and Internet freedoms has culminated with Beijing's Tsinghua
University online-discussion forum being closed to non-students. Off-campus
users, such as alumni, made up a large portion of the site's visitors, so the
decision's impact will not be small. But this incident just shows once again
that Chinese netizens will not be easily defeated. What is most notable about
this recent repression attempt has been the Chinese reaction: The restriction of
Tsinghua's forum has been followed by reports of protests, both virtual and
real. Messages protesting the closing off of the forum have spread through the
Chinese blogosphere, and there are photos circulating on the Internet that claim
to be of protests by Tsinghua students.
"Another Chinese Internet Battle," The Wall Street Journal, March 23,
2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111153019822086799,00.html?mod=opinion%5Fmain%5Feurope%5Fasia
Tax craziness in Michigan
The better course would be for Michigan legislators to approve tax cuts for
manufacturers, dump the job-destroying tax hikes, and balance the state budget
with spending restraint. Better yet, they could finish the job that was started
under previous Governor John Engler of phasing down, and eventually phasing out,
the SBT. In the meantime, there's a perverse logic in Ms. Granholm's belief
that her plan will create new jobs by cutting taxes on the industries that are
laying off workers and raising taxes on the professional service industries that
actually are hiring them. The Granholm plan may well keep Michigan Number One --
in high taxes, business relocations, and job losses.
"Michigan Is for Taxers," The Wall Street Journal, March 23, 2005; Page
A14 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111153958769787116,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Tune in digitally at MSU
The campus radio station at Michigan State University
now broadcasts digital, high-definition signals, making it one of the first
university stations to use the emerging technology. Currently there are about
200 primarily commercial stations around the United States broadcasting
high-definition signals, which are much clearer than analog signals.
High-definition receivers are finding their way into homes and cars, and major
broadcasting companies are reportedly considering upgrading another 1,500
stations to use digital transmitters. Digital transmissions also add a data
component that can include information such as song title or cover art from a
song’s album. Gary A. Reid, general manager of Michigan State’s station, said he
looks forward to experimenting with the data signal to learn what uses might be
appropriate or valuable to the community, such as campus news, sports scores, or
weather. Michigan State bought the digital transmitter when its analog
transmitter was failing, and Reid said the digital transmitter, which cost
$90,000, cost only about $20,000 more than a comparable analog unit.
Chronicle of Higher Education ---
http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i15/15a03102.htm
Also see
http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm05/erm0524.asp
The French will be utterly exhausted
After weeks of angry debate and street protests, French
lawmakers effectively dismantled the country's 35-hour workweek by voting to
allow employers to increase working hours. The National Assembly yesterday
approved a bill permitting employers to negotiate deals with staff to increase
working time by 220 hours a year in return for better pay. The bill effectively
clears the way for the gradual erosion of the 35-hour week, a flagship policy of
the former Socialist-led government that gave many people more time off but
added to concerns about France's declining competitiveness.
Associated Press, "French No Longer Entitled to 35-Hour Workweek," The Wall
Street Journal, March 23, 2005; Page A13 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111150639516786335,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Forget steroid abuse among athletes: The bad
addiction is donuts
Miami Heat star Shaquille O'Neal will testify before a Congressional committee
investigating rumors of widespread doughnut abuse in the National Basketball
Association, the chairman of the committee confirmed today. With a new study
showing that 200 out of 426 NBA players are overweight, the probe into doughnut
abuse is "long overdue" said Rep. Tom Davis (R-VA), chairman of the House
Government Reform Committee.
Andy Borowitz, "Krispy Kreme calls government hearings a ‘witch-hunt’,"
Jewish World Review, March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0305/borowitz032305.php3
Not so carefully researched
Begin with the simplest errors of fact. The aggregate value of global trade was
not $4 billion when President Clinton took office; it was $4 trillion, according
to the OECD. The Palestinians have not had "several" prime ministers since 2003;
they've had two. Richard Perle has never been a member of the Bush
administration. The Iraqi National Museum was not significantly looted in April
2003; Britain's leftist Guardian newspaper put paid to that legend in 2003.
Israelis did not support the dovish Geneva Accords by 53.3%; the actual figure
was 31%, while a plurality of 38% opposed them. The Soviet Union collapsed in
1991 not 1989. Trivia, really, but when Ms. Soderberg snickers about how
candidate Bush struggled through a foreign-policy pop quiz in 2000, one is
compelled to snicker back. Next are larger, but equally basic, errors of
analysis. "It is now believed that [Abu Musab] Zarqawi operates independently,
and even in competition with bin Laden." She must have missed Zarqawi's
declaration of fealty to Osama bin Laden in October. (Bin Laden certainly
noticed it: He recently ordered Zarqawi to widen the scope of his efforts beyond
Iraq.) "While [Ahmed] Chalabi was popular in certain powerful circles in
Washington, he had virtually no support in Iraq." Funny, then, that Mr. Chalabi
did well enough in January's elections to be in serious contention for the
premiership. "The war in Iraq drew the Bush administration's focus away from
Afghanistan during the critical two years following the overthrow of the
Taliban, making the job there infinitely harder." Infinitely? Ten million Afghan
voters missed that nuance.
Brett Stephens' review of The Superpower Myth, by Nancy Soderberg (John
Wiley & Sons, 404 pages, $27.95), The Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2005
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111144763489585598,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
Five children in
critical condition with kidney failure may have picked up a rare infection at
petting zoos, health officials said.
"State Probes Kidney Failure In Children After Petting Zoos," Local6.com,
March 23, 2004 ---
http://www.local6.com/news/4309606/detail.html
Put it in writing in the form of a living
will or advance medical directive.
There is a lesson for all of us in the tragic Schiavo
case: if you want to exclude politicians from the end-of-life decisions you and
your family must make regarding a terminally-ill loved one or, as in the case of
Terri Schiavo, a family member who has suffered a catastrophic accident; if you
don't want to be used as a political cause celebre by political and religious
organizations - express your end-of-life views to your family and loved ones
and, better, put it in writing in the form of a living will or advance medical
directive.
"ACLU of Florida Welcomes Judge Whittemore’s Ruling in the Schiavo Case," ACLU,
March 22, 2005 ---
http://www.aclu.org/Privacy/Privacy.cfm?ID=17800&c=27
Jensen Comment: In spite of my not agreeing with the ACLU on some issues, this
is good advice. And it's important for all adults to declare their wishes at
any age rather than wait until they are senior citizens.
Murder and Rape in the Name of Honor?
Known cases of murder and rape committed to protect a
family's honour are on the rise across Europe, forcing police to explore the
reasons behind such crimes and how to stop them, officials said At a two-day
conference in London, British police spearheaded a campaign to fight so-called
honour-based violence, typically committed against women to protect a family's
reputation. The problem is greatest in Islamic communities in Southeast Asia,
the Middle East and Africa, but it has spread as families migrate, bringing
their traditional values with them.
"Cases of 'honour crimes' on the rise across Europe: British police," Yahoo
News, March 22, 2005 ---
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/afp/20050322/wl_uk_afp/britaincrimeislam
We will provide the sniper rifles and cannons
to kill us
Fifteen years ago, Osama bin Laden sent one of his
operatives to the United States to buy and bring back two-dozen .50-caliber
rifles, a gun that can kill someone from over a mile away and even bring down an
airplane. In spite of all the recent efforts to curb terrorism, bin Laden
could do the same thing today, because buying and shipping the world’s most
powerful sniper rifle is not as difficult as you might think
Ed Bradley, "Buying Big Guns? No Big Deal," CBS Sixty Minutes, March 23,
2005 ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/03/18/60minutes/main681562.shtml
Make every word a hyperword?
A researcher at University College London wants to change the basic functioning
of the Web, allowing readers of Web pages to change those pages—similar to wikis—and
making every word a “hyperword.” The Liquid Information project is the
brainchild of Frode Hegland, who is collaborating with Doug Engelbart, inventor
of the computer mouse. Hegland's vision of the Web is one in which consumers of
content can also be producers of content. Users would be able to make
connections, add links, and change the way information is presented. On an
example page, Hegland has modified a CNN Web page such that users can hover over
any word to display a menu of choices, including getting a definition of the
word, performing a Google search for the word, and highlighting instances of the
word in various colors. Hegland said that we need to replace the current Web,
which consists of “handmade, one-way links” with what he calls “deep legibility”
so that users can “make connections, explicit or otherwise.” Hegland conceded
that a Web like the one he envisions would require smart users. But, he added,
“people are pretty smart. The days of baby steps when everything is shown to
users are over.”
Wired News ---
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,66382,00.html
Add your own Website for free: I think you
should do so at Wikicities
Four years ago, Jimmy Wales launched a free online
encyclopedia that anyone could edit. Now, Wikipedia is one of the most popular
sites on the Web, and Mr. Wales is building on its success with a new venture.
This time, he intends to make a buck. Mr. Wales's closely held company Wikia
Inc. has begun promoting its first for-profit endeavor, an ad-supported site
called
Wikicities.com that is
based on the concept behind Wikipedia. Through Wikicities, groups of Web users
can create their own free Web sites and fill them with, well, nearly anything.
Among the topics being discussed on the nascent site: Macintosh computers,
college hockey and real-world cities like Los Angeles, Beijing and Calgary.
Vauhini Vara, "From Wikipedia's Creator, A New Site for Anyone, Anything," The
Wall Street Journal, March 28, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111196673261990485,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Jensen Comment: I've not tried the
www.Wikicities.com site, but often go to Wikipedia and even add to its
freeware encyclopedia entries ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111196673261990485,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Sadly, Mr. Wales will not give me enough space to transfer my huge site to
Wikicities.com.
AL-QAEDA'S STRATEGY UNTIL 2020
In light of this issue's report on the Idarat
al-Tawahhush and its view on the secondary importance of Afghanistan in
al-Qaeda's global struggle, a further window into al-Qaeda's strategic thinking
is provided by a Jordanian analyst Bassam al-Baddarin. Writing on March 11 for
the Arabic language daily al-Quds al-Arabi, his article ‘Al-Qaeda has drawn up
working strategy lasting until 2020,' puts together from the assorted writings
of al-Qaeda's ‘strategic brain' Muhammad Makkawi, what appears to be a coherent
long-term strategy. It seeks to explain the series of events since September 11
2001, the events in Afghanistan and Iraq, and potentially beyond. The subject
of al-Baddarin's study, Muhammad Ibrahim Makkawi, is better known as Sayf
al-Adel. He was a colonel in Egyptian Special Forces before joining with the
mujahideen in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet invasion. At the 1998 foundation
of World Islamic Front against Crusaders and Jews (the full, official title for
al-Qaeda), Sayf al-Adel was granted a pivotal role in military training, and
subsequently headed the military wing, succeeding Abu Hafs al-Masri to become
number three in al-Qaeda after Bin Laden and al-Zawahiri. In 2003, Iran at one
point offered to extradite Sayf al-Adel, whom it claimed to have under arrest,
in exchange for Mujahideen-e Khalq Organization leaders, but Washington rejected
the offer. The theory: Al-Baddarin identifies from Sayf al-Adel's writings a
core thesis explaining events — a regional war against the Americans. It aims at
opening the jihadist triangle of terror, beginning with Afghanistan, passing
though Iran and southern Iraq, and ending with southern Turkey, southern Lebanon
and Syria. The first, achieved, step in this strategy was to regionalize the
struggle with the United States. In this, the events of September 11 constituted
the first step: dragging the United States into the Arab region in preparation
for an extended war of attrition. Al-Qaeda knew in advance that the quick and
inevitable response would be a comprehensive attack from the super-power against
Afghanistan, but that this would play into their hands by provoking another
giant — the Islamic Nation — and forcing it to wake up from its slumbers
. . . (Continued in the article)
Stepen Ulph, "AL-QAEDA'S STRATEGY UNTIL 2020," The Jamestown Foundation,
March 17, 2005 ---
http://jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=410&issue_id=3267&article_id=2369441
If it's so easy to use a surrogate, how many
other teachers did not take their own certification tests?
Rubin Leitner, who is developmentally disabled, sits
outside his Brooklyn home, saying Bronx teacher Wayne Brightly (below) paid him
to take state exam. A Bronx teacher who repeatedly flunked his state
certification exam paid a formerly homeless man with a developmental disorder $2
to take the test for him, authorities said yesterday. The illegal stand-in - who
looks nothing like teacher Wayne Brightly - not only passed the high-stakes
test, he scored so much better than the teacher had previously that the state
knew something was wrong, officials said ... Brightly, 38, a teacher at one of
the city's worst schools, Middle School 142, allegedly concocted the plot to
swap identities with Leitner last summer. If he failed the state exam again,
Brightly risked losing his $59,000-a-year job.
"Schoolhouse crock," New York Daily News ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/292646p-250502c.html
Jensen Comment: Now that he's lost his job in the Bronx school teacher, about
the only think Wayne Brightly is qualified for is to run for U.S. Congress.
What the uninformed don't know about the
present Social Security pension fund?
We can assume that workers retiring today receive a
rate of return of approximately 2 percent and that future retirees will receive
even lower rates of return.
Michael Tanner, "The Better Deal," The Cato Institute, October 28,
2003 (Note the date) ---
http://www.cato.org/pubs/ssps/ssp31.pdf
Jensen Comment: And you have to live to a ripe old age to get your 2 percent.
Beside Ronald Reagan,
the most underestimated president of my lifetime is George W. Bush. His capacity
to frame the Grand Idea, to give it practical form and to engage in serious
national conversation with those too young to have been taken seriously are
defining differences between presidents who hold office and those who alter
history. Social Security reform, and particularly personal savings accounts, is
a Grand Idea properly framed that more timid leaders, and those who govern by
poll, would never have spoken. For decades, leaders in the White House and in
Congress have rolled forward its day of reckoning, hugely expanding and then
narrowly reforming, but always with an eye to the next election. It's one of the
greatest entitlement cruelties the nation's leaders have inflicted upon their
children. As Social Security's actuaries reported to Health and Human Services
Secretary Michael Leavitt last week: The system is simply unsustainable. When
the system was created in 1935, 40 workers supported one retiree. By 1950, it
was down to 16-1. By 2030, it is projected to be 2-1. What we will ask of our
children is that they fashion their own lives, but drain their own incomes
excessively to support more affluent and secure elders. We could raise their
taxes, sure. As Leavitt noted in remarks at Cobb's Galleria conference center,
"We can't continue to solve this problem by raising payroll taxes. We've done
that 20 times. They've gone from 1935 at 2 percent of our income (to a yearly
maximum of $70), up to 12.4 percent. To go further would be an economy killer."
The solution to an unsustainable system is to change it. That's what the
president has proposed. The pledge to those born before 1950 is that nothing
changes. "There will be plenty of money in the system to take care of them,"
says Leavitt. "What's unspoken there, and should now be spoken, is that anybody
born after that should worry. Why? Because of what the actuaries said to me
today: 'The system is simply unsustainable.' " By 2017, Social Security begins
to run deficits. By 2041, benefits would have to be cut by a projected 25
percent, experts say.
Jim Wooten, "Bush's vision shows insight," Atlanta Journal Constitution,
March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/wooten/2005/032705.html
Economics has come to dominate (to the
exclusion of other fields) the social sciences and political arena.
The short version of the
Bazerman and Malhotra chapter is that the authors
believe that economics has come to dominate (to the exclusion of other fields)
the social sciences and political arena. (Somewhat analogous to the idea that
rational economics has dominated in finance to the detriment of psychology and
behavioral finance).
The authors identify "five predominant myths, adapted from pervasive economic
assumptions, which serve as guiding policy principles and serve to destroy value
in society. These myths include:
1) Individuals have stable and consistent preferences
2) Individuals know their preferences and they pursue known preferences with
volition
3) Individuals make decisions based on all of the evidence available to them
4) Free markets solve economic problems
5) Credible empirical evidence consists of outcome data, not of mechanism data"
Jim Mahar's Blog, March 23, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Jensen Comment: Economics may dominate in most realms, but psychology and
sociology have stomped out good economic reasoning when it comes to Social
Security reform.
The Sharpe Ratio is
explained by Nobel Laureate Bill Sharpe at
http://www.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/art/sr/sr.htm
"Sharpening
Sharpe Ratios," by William Goetzmann, Jonathan Ingersoll, Matthew Spiegel, Ivo
Welch ---
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=302815
It is now well known that
the Sharpe ratio and other related reward-to-risk measures may be
manipulated with option-like strategies. This paper derives the general
conditions for achieving the maximum expected Sharpe ratio. Also derived are
static rules for achieving the maximum Sharpe ratio with two or more
options, as well as a continuum of derivative contracts. The optimal
strategy has a truncated right tail and a fat left tail. Additionally, the
paper provides dynamic rules for increasing the Sharpe ratio.
In order to address the
sensitivity of the Sharpe ratio to information-less, option-like strategies,
the paper proposes an alternative measure that is less susceptible to such
manipulations. The case for using this alternative ranking metric is
particularly compelling in the hedge fund industry where the use of
derivatives is unconstrained and manager compensation itself induces a
non-linear payoff.
Bob Jensen's tutorials on accounting for
derivatives are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/caseans/000index.htm
Presumably the English will only go into
future wars on non-intelligence
Britain will never again go to war on intelligence.
James Kirkup, The Scotsman, March 24, 2005 ---
http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=313562005
I've been waiting by the hour all my life
Every hour of every working day, the U.S. Government awards a contract worth
$1,000,000. Combined with state and local Governments, total contract dollars
are over $800 billion per year – making the United States Government the largest
business in the world. The U.S. Government offers contracting opportunities in
almost any industry. The latest count shows there are 22 million small
businesses in the United States, yet only about 1% of them participate in
Government Contracts.
Da Vinci Institute Newsletter on March 23, 2005
I'm glad this wasn't an airline company now
starting up 13-year old engines
More than 600 workers at a Diamond Walnut
processing plant in Stockton walked off the job and took up picket signs in
September 1991. On Wednesday, the union announced that workers have agreed on a
new deal that ends the labor dispute. Tuesday night, workers at Diamond Walnut
voted 184-61 to accept a new five-year deal with Diamond Walnut, ending a bitter
labor dispute between the company and the Teamsters union.
"Walnut Company Strike Cracked After 13 Years Union Accepts New 5-Year Deal,"
KCRA Channel 3, March 23, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/LaborMoment
The proposed Florida
Academic Bill of Rights legislation follows on the heels of
legislation in other states. The legislation proposed in most states is not so
much “anti-democratic” as it is democratic/anti-McCarthyism. Much of this is
aimed at preventing the college classroom from becoming a religious platform and
to “prohibit political and religious discrimination” (
Ohio
’s wording). Totally free speech can lead to fundamentalist,
anti-Semitic, and political dogma in the name of free speech and academic
freedom. My personal test of classroom content free speech has always been the
curriculum plan and whether or not course content is faithful to the curriculum
plan. If the curriculum calls for a fundamentalist religious content or
unbalanced political fundamentalism on the right or left sides of politics, then
it is probably acceptable to lambaste other religious and/or political stances.
But students should be forewarned about fundamentalist biases in particular
courses they are signing up for at the time of registration. Ward Churchill’s
courses probably fit into the ethnic studies curriculum plan at
Colorado
University since every student is
most likely forewarned that the course will totally lambaste both
U.S. government
and business. That’s fair enough. Should his courses also be anti-Semitic in
the name of academic freedom if they ever should cross that line? I doubt that
anti-Semitics falls into any curriculum plan at Colorado University.
The President of
Columbia
University took a somewhat
similar position following “intimidation of students”
The facts of the controversy, as we understand them,
are as follows. The David Project has produced a film2 that contains accusations
that Columbia professors -- particularly from the Middle East Asian Language and
Culture (MEALAC) Department -- have taken positions that are seriously critical
of policies pursued by the Israeli government and have engaged in the
intimidation of students "when they voiced pro-Israel views." And, according to
the Columbia Spectator, "[o]ne professor featured in the film is Professor
Joseph Massad." Two episodes involving Professor Massad’s interactions with
students are apparently identified in the film. One involves an alleged exchange
outside the classroom between Professor Massad and Tomy Schoenfeld, a former
member of the Israel Defense Forces, in which Mr. Schoenfeld reportedly asked
Professor Massad a question and the Professor responded that he would not answer
the question until Mr. Schoenfeld revealed "How many Palestinians [he had]
killed."4 The second episode involves an exchange between a student, Noah Liben,
who was defending the treatment of Sephardic Jews by the Ashkenazi majority in
Israel and who concluded this discussion by asking whether Professor Massad
understood the student’s point. Professor Massad allegedly answered that he did
not understand the point that the student was trying to make and, according to
Mr. Liben, the Professor "smirked" during the student-teacher exchange. In the
film, and elsewhere,5 Professor Massad is further accused, in his lectures and
writings, of describing the State of Israel as "a racist state that does not
legitimately represent Jews."
Arthur Eisenberg, Donna Lieberman, and Udi Ofer, "NYCLU Defends Academic
Freedom At Columbia University Update: The NYCLU's letter to President
Bollinger," December 20, 2004 ---
http://www.nyclu.org/bollinger_ltr_122004.html
New student grievance procedures at Columbia University
Columbia University on Monday announced new grievance
procedures for students who feel that they have been unfairly treated in their
courses. The new procedures follow an investigation into allegations that Middle
Eastern studies professors intimidated students who were pro-Israel. A faculty
committee rejected most of those charges, but said that inadequate grievance
procedures created distrust between students and professors.
Scott Jaschik, Inside Higher Ed, April 12, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/12/qt
Two sides to every story: Professor Massad
at Columbia University tells his side of the story
But he intends to stay on at the alma mater that hired him
in 1999 as an assistant professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual
history (this semester he is teaching two seminars) and gain tenure in 2006-7.
He is also seeking "protection" from the administration in order to reinstate
his controversial course "Palestinian and Israeli Politics and Societies," the
one nicknamed "Israel Is Racist" by detractors and crashed by hecklers who,
because Professor Massad is a fan of free speech, are allowed to have their say.
That was the 2002 class where Deena Shanker, a student he does not recall, says
he threatened her with ejection after she asked him if Israeli troops issued
warnings before bombing civilian areas, a claim the report found credible. "I
have never asked any student to leave a class; I never lose my cool," he says.
"I make it my business not to."
Robin Finn, "At the Center of an Academic Storm, a Lesson in Calm," The New
York Times, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/08/nyregion/08lives.html?
Definition of Fundamentalism from the Columbia
University Electronic Encyclopedia ---
http://www.answers.com/topic/fundamentalism
Academic Bill of Rights
(Ohio)
Last week (early February), Ohio
became the latest state where legislators introduced an "Academic Bill
of Rights for Higher Education." The bill seeks to impose on all
private and public colleges and universities an administrative code
allegedly designed to prohibit political and religious discrimination.
It calls on the institutions to guarantee student access "to a broad
range of serious scholarly opinion" and expose them to "a plurality of
serious scholarly methodologies and perspectives." It insists that
students "be graded solely on the basis of their reasoned answers" and
prohibits discrimination on the basis of "political, ideological, or
religious beliefs." Faculty members would be forbidden from using their
classrooms "for the purpose of political, ideological, religious, or
antireligious indoctrination"; and they would be barred from
"persistently introducing controversial matter into the classroom ...
that has no relation to their subject of study and that serves no
legitimate pedagogical purpose." The bill extends its dubious
protections to all student organizations, to the hiring and promotion
process, and even to "professional societies formed to advance knowledge
within an area of research."
"The New Repression of the Postmodern Right," David Steigerwald,
InsideHigherEd, February 11, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/the_new_repression_of_the_postmodern_right
Academic Bill of Rights (Florida)
Academic freedom is getting more public
attention that it has in many years. This week, legislation advanced in
Florida to create an “Academic Bill of Rights” that many professors find
deeply offensive. And the sponsor’s statements about professors left
many of them furious. Meanwhile, in New York City, Columbia University’s
president gave a talk outlining the history of academic freedom — and
suggesting that faculty members need to consider the appropriateness of
pushing some views past a certain point in the classroom. Florida is the
latest state to see political fighting — some of it nasty — over the
Academic Bill of Rights.
The legislation was created by David Horowitz, the one-time campus
radical whose politics have shifted rightward and who argues that
liberal professors use their classrooms to indoctrinate students. The
legislation requires faculty members to expose their students to a wide
variety of viewpoints — a requirement that professors say will leave
them vulnerable to complaints every time they express a strong opinion .
. . Leaders of Columbia’s Senate were unavailable to comment on the
speech Thursday. But one of Columbia’s toughest critics had praise for
it. Charles Jacobs, president of the
David Project,
which has organized the criticism of Columbia’s professors of Middle
Eastern studies, said Bollinger’s comments about professors “were
exactly what he should say” about professors in the classroom. “I think
he’s right to chide those who would use the podium in an ideological
way,” he said.
Scott Jaschik, "Academic Freedom Wars," Inside Higher Ed,
March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/acfreedom
Peace is not
patriotic. Peace is subversive, because peace anticipates a very
different world than the one in which we live--a world where the U.S.
would have no place. The only true heroes are those who find ways that
help defeat the U.S. military. I personally would like to see a million
Mogadishus.
Nicholas De Genova (then
anthropology professor at Columbia University) as quoted by
Ron
Howell,
"Radicals Speak Out At Columbia ‘Teach-In,’"
NewsDay, March 27, 2003.
Non-existent academic
freedom in China
Universities across China are tightening controls on student-run
Internet discussion forums as part of a Communist Party campaign to
strengthen what it calls "ideological education" on campuses. The
crackdown has caused widespread resentment among students and prompted
at least two recent demonstrations. The Web sites, which run on school
networks, host some of China's largest and liveliest online bulletin
boards. They serve as virtual meeting places where millions of educated
Chinese across the country gather for discussions about everything from
pop culture to politics.
Philip P. Pan, "Chinese universities crack down on Internet forums New
controls are part of a campaign by party to ensure students do not
challenge its rule," Houston Chronicle, March 26, 2005 ---
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/world/3103053
Jensen Comment: It is interesting to
note that the author of the above article, Philip Pan, wrote the article
for the Washington Post. In the March 16, 2005 edition of
Tidbits, I posted the following modules ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/tidbits031605.htm
I think Philip Bennett should move to
China and try out that nation's free speech and democratic realities
"I don't think US should be the leader of the
world . . . I think China is the best place in the world to be an
American journalist right now." Philip Bennett, Editor of
Washington Post ---
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200503/10/print20050310_176350.html
The People's
Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese communist dictatorship,
announced today that it would merge with the Washington Post, to
publish "an accurate newspaper of global significance called The Wa-Po
Daily." Washington Post Managing Editor Philip Bennett will
oversee news-gathering operations for The Wa-Po Daily, under the
guidance of "an unnamed committee of Chinese truth advocates." The
first hints of the media marriage emerged from an interview Mr. Bennett
granted to People's Daily correspondent Yong Tang, in which the
veteran American newsman drew no moral distinction between the Chinese
and American expressions of democracy and accused the Bush
administration of lying and limiting freedom of the press.
Scott Ott, "Chinese Daily-Washington Post Merger Boosts Credibility,"
Scrapple Face, March 14, 2005 ---
http://www.scrappleface.com/MT/archives/002112.html
China's
Communist Party maintains its monopoly on political power by delivering
benefits to its 1.3 billion people, in line with governments worldwide.
It also guards its turf jealously by ensuring that watchful party
officials sit in every corner of society deemed a potential threat to
that monopoly. This entails everything from "officially sanctioned"
religious organizations and political parties to sports groups, chambers
of commerce, university departments and farm collectives. Groups viewed
as a threat are quickly batted down, as seen with official crackdowns on
Tibetan monks, Falun Gong practitioners, separatist Muslims in the
country's west and Internet essayists. A recently published list of
banned gatherings, which included an amateur singing club, a pigeon
lovers group and a dozen people holding a ceremony to bless a new
building, shows how jittery the party can be. Police, cybercops and
vaguely worded national security laws are among the bluntest weapons in
the party's arsenal. At least as effective are the demotions and other
subtle threats that engender self-censorship. Communist leaders have
read their history and are well aware that as least as many Chinese
dynasties have fallen to internal rot, complacency and corruption as to
barbarian threats beyond the Great Wall. That's where the Hu and Wen
campaign for enhanced discipline comes in. With 68 million members, or
an all-time high of 5.2% of China's population, the Communist Party is
bloated and increasingly unfocused.
Mark Magnier, "Flip Side to Fame in China," Los Angeles Times,
March 14, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ChinaMarch14
Free speech versus indecency
in the media
. . . a California woman has
launched a Web site,
www.speakspeak.org,
meant to counter what she calls the excessive influence of
anti-indecency groups, such as the Parents Television
Council (PTC), that flood the government with complaints
designed to spur fines against radio and television
broadcasters. Sanders said his bill is meant to head
off possible legislation discussed by Sen. Ted Stevens
(R-Alaska) that would give the FCC the power to fine
channels such as HBO and companies such as XM Satellite
Radio Inc. if they air offensive content.
Frank Ahrens, "Anti-Indecency Forces Opposed," Washington
Post, March 26, 2005; Page D12 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1962-2005Mar25.html?referrer=email
Surge in accounting undergraduates coupled
with a 17-year low in the number of new accounting professors
Here are some numbers that don't appear to add up. Even
as the accounting profession has endured a torrent of negative publicity, more
college students are enrolling in accounting programs. The enrollments are so
strong that some universities face a problem: a shortage of professors to teach
these young bean-counters . . . However, the comeback of the accounting career
occurs as the number of business doctorates produced is at a 17-year low and
universities struggle to recruit new accounting professors. That leaves many
wondering who will be left to teach all the new rules and regulations to the
growing student pool. While many academic fields are suffering from professor
shortages, the issue is more acute in accounting because of the pull toward
high-paying public-accounting jobs.
Diya Gullapalli, "Interest In Accounting Doesn't Seem to Add Up," The Wall
Street Journal ---
http://www.collegejournal.com/salarydata/accounting/20040802-gullapalli.html
Fooling Investors
A new report by the Rose Foundation for Communities and
the Environment identifies widespread practices that may lead to environmental
accounting fraud. "Fooling Investors" shows how companies keep information about
expensive environmental liabilities like toxic pollution, product health
hazards, worker exposure, and global warming away from shareholder scrutiny. See
further details in our full news item at
http://accountingeducation.com/news/news6001.html
Double Entries, March 25, 2005
Difficulties of measuring changes in learning
over time.
Regular assessment in the service of accountability is
a consistent theme in current calls for reform in all levels of education. In
this month's Carnegie Perspectives, Lloyd Bond, a noted scholar in the field of
measurement, calls our attention to the many traps associated with one of the
most frequent uses of assessment: the technical difficulties of measuring
changes in learning over time. The measurement of learning is so central to the
work of practitioners that Bond presents a compelling case for training in
educational testing to become a more central and rigorous feature of all teacher
education programs. I think you will find Lloyd's observations both instructive
and enjoyable. Following our theme in these Perspectives, Lloyd provides us
with a different way to think about teaching and learning. Since our goal is to
contribute to the dialogue on education issues, we hope that you find this
commentary compelling and that you will take us up on our invitation to visit
our online forum—Carnegie Conversations—where you can engage publicly with the
authors and read and respond to what others have to say. Carnegie Conversations
is on the Web at:
http://perspectives.carnegiefoundation.org/
Lee S. Shulman, President The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching
This is absolutely unfair! If a CEO loots
his/her company, the company pays insurance for all legal costs of the CEO even
if he's convicted of looting the company that pays the insurance premiums.
A company that insured Tyco International Ltd.
executives must pay legal bills for former Chief Executive L. Dennis Kozlowski,
who is on trial on corporate-looting charges, an appeals court said. In a 5-0
ruling, the New York Supreme Court Appellate Division left open the possibility
that Federal Insurance Co., a Chubb Corp. subsidiary, could later recover some
of the costs from Mr. Kozlowski. A lower court judge had ruled that Federal
Insurance, which provided liability coverage to Tyco, was required to pay Mr.
Kozlowski's legal bills . . . Mr. Kozlowski and Mark H. Swartz, Tyco's former
chief financial officer, are accused of stealing $170 million from the
conglomerate by hiding unauthorized pay and bonuses and by abusing loan
programs. They also are accused of making $430 million by inflating the value of
Tyco stock by lying about the company's finances. Their retrial in Manhattan's
State Supreme Court on charges of grand larceny, falsifying business records and
violating state business laws is ending its second month. Their first trial
ended in a mistrial in April.
Associated Press, "Insurer to Pay Kozlowski's Costs," The Wall
Street Journal, March 24, 2005; Page C3 --http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111161345997387951,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Bob Jensen's threads on how hopeless it is to discourage white collar crime are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#CrimePays
This is also unfair and unethical
Rank-and-file employees are lying more often at
work, by some measures. Employees calling in sick have hit a five-year high, and
three-fifths of those who do so aren't sick at all, but are tending to personal
needs or just feel entitled to a day off, says a 2004 survey of 305 employers by
CCH Inc. In a separate survey last year of 1,316 workers by Kronos Inc., a
labor-management and consulting concern, more than one-third of workers admit to
having lied about their need for sick days. Groups that track federal
family-leave use say more employees are stretching the reasons for taking time
off, even claiming that a common cold warrants a medical leave. In another
indicator, job applicants reporting false academic credentials have hit a
three-year high, with 12% of resumes containing at least some phony information,
according to the Liars Index, a survey by recruiting firm Jude M. Werra &
Associates.
"How and Why We Lie at the Office: From Pilfered Pens to Padded Accounts," The
Wall Street Journal, March 24, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111162391698488207,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
I think this is the best idea of the 21st
Century
Today, Rudy Exelrod is itself being sued -- for not
seeking more money. And California courts have ruled that the malpractice suit
should go to trial, surprising the plaintiffs' bar and undoubtedly delighting
business executives who have faced class actions. No matter what the ultimate
verdict, the suit -- filed by a lawyer married to a former Farmers employee who
was disappointed she didn't get a nickel from the overtime suit -- puts the
spotlight on an intriguing question: Can you sue the lawyers? Or, more
precisely, should class-action lawyers be as vulnerable to malpractice suits as
other lawyers?
David Wessel, "Now Being Sued: Class-Action Lawyers," The Wall Street Journal,
March 24, 2005; Page A2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111162311502888186,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bravo: Saying no to free money
But Ms. Diemer, a widow, doesn't want her check. While
some residents clearly were inconvenienced by the evacuation, Ms. Diemer is one
of about 18 residents so far who have decided not to take the money from Arkema
Inc. "I shouldn't get $550 for having a wonderful time at lunch," says Ms.
Diemer, who feels she was never in danger. We've heard so much lately on the
debate about class-action lawsuits -- specifically on the question of whether
the payouts have become excessive and exist more to benefit plaintiffs' lawyers
than the plaintiffs. This debate led President Bush last month to sign the Class
Action Fairness Act, designed to prevent plaintiffs' lawyers from searching
around for local jurisdictions that may yield top-dollar awards. The act will
allow defendants to move more class actions into federal court.
Jeff Zaslow, "Saying 'No' to Free Money," The Wall Street Journal, March
24, 2005; Page D3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111162409908488212,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Full time career as a part-time tenured
professor
Now, amid growing discussion of the need for academe to
be more “family friendly,” the University of California is considering one of
the most ambitious programs ever for tenured and tenure-track faculty members to
work part time for extended periods in their careers. The plan has only just
been formally released for review — and is probably months away from adoption —
but proponents hope it could lead to drastic changes in faculty career paths.
And the prestige of the university could lend support to other institutions —
especially research universities — that are considering such policies. That’s
because California’s policy is also attempting to tackle one of the toughest
issues in the development of such part-time options: how to evaluate research
productivity.
Scott Jaschik, "A Real Option," Inside Higher Ed, March 24, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/24/parttime
"Back off kid, this a my job"
The city's teenagers have always worked less than the
rest of the nation's youth, in large part because of a general surplus in the
city's overall labor force, and because New York teenagers are more likely to be
in school. But the numbers of teenagers seeking jobs in the city have thinned
at a far faster rate than in the rest of the country in the last 15 years,
coinciding with a period of explosive growth in the immigrant population in the
city. Over the same period, record numbers of people left the welfare rolls for
low-wage jobs. Only 22 percent of New Yorkers from 16 to 19 looked for work in
2004, according to the Department of Labor, compared with 44 percent of their
counterparts nationwide. Of all teenagers who were eligible to work, only 22
percent of New York teenagers did so, compared with 36 percent around the
country. In 1989, 31 percent of New York City residents from 16 to 19 worked.
Jennifer Steinhauer, "That Guy Flipping Burgers Is No Kid Anymore," The New
York Times, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/nyregion/27teen.html?oref=login
An investing balloon that will one day burst
The numbers are mind-boggling: 15 years ago, hedge
funds managed less than $40 billion. Today, the figure is approaching $1
trillion. By contrast, assets in mutual funds grew at an impressive but much
slower rate, to $8.1 trillion from $1 trillion, during the same period. The
number of hedge fund firms has also grown - to 3,307 last year, up 74 percent
from 1,903 in 1999. During the same period, the number of funds created - a
manager can start more than one fund at a time - has surged 209 percent, with
1,406 funds introduced in 2004, according to Hedge Fund Research, based in
Chicago.
Jenny Anderson and Riva D. Atlas, "If I Only Had a Hedge Fund," The New York
Times, The New York Times, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/business/yourmoney/27hedge.html
Jensen Comment: The name "hedge fund" seems to imply that risk is hedged.
Nothing could be further from the case. Hedge funds do not have to hedge
risks, Hedge funds should instead be called private investment clubs. If
structured in a certain way they can avoid SEC oversight.
See "Hedge Fund" at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/acct5341/speakers/133glosf.htm#H-Terms
Remember how the
Russian space program worked in the 1960s? The only flights that got publicized
were the successful ones. Hedge funds are like that. The ones asking for your
money have terrific records. You don't hear about the ones that blew up. That
fact should strongly color your view of hedge funds with terrific records.
Forbes, January 13, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ForbesJan_13
Judge tells the jury that Morgan Stanley did
it
The judge in a high-profile lawsuit brought by
financier Ron Perelman said she regarded Morgan Stanley's failure to produce
documents as "offensive" and would instruct the jury that the Wall Street firm
helped to defraud Mr. Perelman. In what legal experts called a highly unusual
ruling, Florida Judge Elizabeth Maass wrote that she will tell the jury that
Morgan Stanley had a role in helping appliance maker Sunbeam Corp. conceal
accounting woes that reduced the value of Mr. Perelman's investment in Sunbeam.
The ruling increases the possibility that a jury will find against Morgan
Stanley and force the firm to pay Mr. Perelman some or all of the $680 million
he says he lost on the investment. In addition he is seeking $2 billion in
punitive damages
Suzanne Craig and Kara Scannell, "Judge's Fraud Ruling Puts Heat On Morgan
Stanley, Law Firm," The Wall Street Journal, L March 24, 2005; Page A1
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111162256208888176,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us
Bob Jensen's "Rotten to the Core" threads are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
The report notes six allegations of either
plagiarism or distortion of scholarly materials
Where Churchill may face difficulty is in allegations
of research misconduct. The report notes six allegations of either plagiarism or
distortion of scholarly materials. In one of the cases, the report notes, a
lawyer at Dalhousie University, in Nova Scotia, concluded that one of its
professors had been plagiarized by Churchill. The Dalhousie professor also
charges that Churchill made a threatening phone call to her — a charge he has
denied.
Scott Jaschik, "Churchill Survives — For Now,," Inside Higher Ed, March
25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/churchill
The university received complaints from
Indian leaders 10 years ago that Churchill was being untruthful
The report also examined an unusual allegation that has
been raised: That Churchill is not an American Indian, as he has claimed.
According to the report, Churchill has always identified himself to the
university as an American Indian, and the university received complaints from
Indian leaders 10 years ago that Churchill was being untruthful. At the time,
the university concluded that self-identification was an appropriate way for
Churchill to declare himself an Indian, so the matter was dropped. Since the
university ruled on the matter a decade ago, the review concluded that it could
not investigate questions with regard to Churchill’s hiring. But, it did say
that if Churchill is misrepresenting himself as an Indian, that could constitute
research misconduct.
Scott Jaschik, "Churchill Survives — For Now,," Inside Higher Ed, March
25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/churchill
“A remaining question
is whether Professor Churchill has attempted to gain a scholarly voice,
credibility, and an audience for his scholarship by wrongfully asserting that he
is an Indian. There is evidence that Professor Churchill’s assertion of his
Indian status is material to his scholarship, yet there is serious doubt about
his Indian identity,” the review said. “The evidence is sufficient to warrant
referral of this question to the Committee on Research Misconduct for inquiry
and, if appropriate, investigation to determine whether Professor Churchill
relies on his Indian identity in his scholarship and, if so, whether he has
fabricated that identity.”
Scott Jaschik, "Churchill Survives — For Now,," Inside Higher Ed, March
25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/churchill
Bob Jensen's threads on the saga of Ward
Churchill are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyChurchill.htm
Many banks employ archaic data privacy
practices
Today, most large-scale identity thefts go unreported,
either because the bank wants to avoid tarnishing their reputation or because
they are simply unaware of the breaches. Many banks employ archaic data privacy
practices that haven't kept pace with the evolving threats. The exploits of
identity thieves, however, which are often coordinated by international crime
syndicates, have become increasingly creative and sophisticated. Many banks are
caught in a catch-22 situation: Their customers are demanding greater online
access to a broader range of financial services, yet as banks make their
services available online to customers, they're also making them available to
thieves. There's no single silver bullet that can eliminate identity theft,"
concludes Stickley. "Based on our experience, the banks that do the best job of
protecting their customers' information are the banks that view information
security not as a static one-time fix, but as a regularly monitored business
process that requires continuous improvement. Information security must become
infused directly into every facet of the business, governing everything from
policies and procedures for how the receptionist greets front desk visitors, to
how waste paper is shredded, to how software engineers design and test the guts
of online banking applications."
AccountingWeb, March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100697
Parents bear heavy responsibility for dismal
school dropout rates
The high-school dropout crisis in Los Angeles and
across California is far worse than anybody knew. Researchers at Harvard
University reported Wednesday that more than half of the students who enter Los
Angeles Unified School District high schools, and nearly 30 percent across the
state, don't graduate within four years. The dropout rates are sharply higher
for Latino and African-American children. Those numbers are roughly twice as bad
as members of the education establishment led the public to believe. For years,
they have blamed transiency of the large immigrant population and a lot of other
reasons for the lack of good data, while fudging the numbers to make the
situation look less dire.
"Crisis in education: Parents bear heavy responsibility for dismal school
dropout rates," LA Daily News, March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1413,200~20951~2780754,00.htm
The American
Association for Higher Education, which was founded in 1969,
announced Thursday that
it would shut down its operations. The group has been influential on a number of
curricular and teaching issues, but has faced a declining membership and
financial difficulties . . . Lovett said that most AAHE funds come from
membership and conference fees, and that both have been in decline. There are
currently about 5,600 members — mostly faculty members and academic
administrators — down from more than 9,000 in the late 1990’s. She also said
that foundation grants have been harder to come by in recent years.
Scott Jaschik, "Influential Group Calls It Quits," Inside Higher Ed,
March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/aahe
An address by the President of Princeton
University
In a copy of her prepared text, Tilghman gave many
examples of actual conditions that hinder talented women from advancing in
science. For example, she cited a study she commissioned in 2001 of untenured
faculty members in engineering and natural sciences at Princeton. She reported
that 33 percent of women and 64 percent of men reported having strong mentoring
support. Tilghman also noted the support that comes (or doesn’t) at home. One
third of female scientists are unmarried, compared to 17 percent of men. And of
married scientists, 10 percent of women and 40 percent of men have unemployed
spouses. Summers took a very different approach to examining the problem.
Bowing to faculty demands, he posted a copy of his remarks on Harvard’s Web
site, but that transcript was recently removed. Fortunately, The Harvard
Crimson’s Web site still has a copy of the transcript, which allows for a
comparison of the two presidents’ talks (go to the link below):
Scott Jaschik, "The Anti-Summers," March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/25/tilghman
A lesbian scientist moves from Virginia to
to
Massachusetts
During those three years, however, my partner and I
paid thousands of dollars for private health insurance when my partner was
working part time, because she could not get those benefits through me. We did
all we legally could to provide ourselves with the rights enjoyed by
heterosexual couples, including the right to visit each other in the hospital
and make medical decisions for each other. But we wanted to have a family, and
in Virginia we could not both be legally recognized as parents of our future
children. Because it seemed clear that laws of Virginia were not going to change
in any way beneficial to us in the near future, I went on the job market in
2004. I was offered an exciting position at a university in Massachusetts, which
had just become the first state where same-sex couples could get married. By
contrast, around the same time the Virginia legislature passed the “Marriage
Affirmation Act.” This bill outlawed any same-sex “partnership contract or other
arrangements that purport to provide the benefits of marriage.” Under some
interpretations, this law negated the medical powers of attorney we had obtained
to guarantee hospital visitation in case of emergencies.
Lynn Adler, "A Reason to Move," Inside Higher Ed, March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/03/25/adler
UN Report on the progress of family planning
and population control
Countries are making real progress in carrying out a
bold global action plan that links poverty alleviation to women’s rights and
universal access to reproductive health. Ten years into the new era opened by
the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in Cairo,
the quality and reach of family planning programmes have improved, safe
motherhood and HIV prevention efforts are being scaled up, and governments
embrace the ICPD Programme of Action as an essential blueprint for realizing
development goals.
UNFPA ---
http://www.unfpa.org/swp/swpmain.htm
New York Pubic Library: 275,000 images
digitized from primary sources
NYPL Digital Gallery provides access to over 275,000
images digitized from primary sources and printed rarities in the collections of
The New York Public Library, including illuminated manuscripts, historical maps,
vintage posters, rare prints and photographs, illustrated books, printed
ephemera, and more.
NYPL Digital Gallery ---
http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/index.cfm
Discovering Buddhist Art
Do you know the difference between a demon and bodhisattva? Find out by browsing
the works of Buddhist art in the SAM collection. This interactive is a virtual
guide to Discovering Buddhist Art, now on view at the Seattle Asian Art Museum.
Discovering Buddhist Art ---
http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/interactives/buddhism/enter.asp
Center for Health Services and Policy
Founded in 1990, the George Washington University
Center for Health Services and Policy is "dedicated to providing policymakers,
public health officials, health care administrators, and advocates with the
information and ideas they need to improve access to quality, affordable health
care." With a staff of several dozen, the Center's work falls into a number of
topical areas, such as welfare reform, HIV/AIDS, behavioral health policy, and
maternal and child health. One of the first stops for new visitors should be the
"Publications" section, which contains the organization's latest work (and
archived materials) emanating from different research areas. The site also
contains a helpful listing of relevant links and the opportunity to join the
Center's managed behavioral healthcare electronic mailing list.
From the Scout Report on March 24, 2005.
The home page for Center for Health Services and Policy is at
http://www.gwhealthpolicy.org/chsrp/
Where have all the children gone?
San Francisco, where the median house price is now
about $700,000, had the lowest percentage of people under 18 of any large city
in the nation, 14.5 percent, compared with 25.7 percent nationwide, the 2000
census reported. Seattle, where there are more dogs than children, was a close
second. Boston, Honolulu, Portland, Miami, Denver, Minneapolis, Austin and
Atlanta, all considered, healthy, vibrant urban areas, were not far behind. The
problem is not just that American women are having fewer children, reflected in
the lowest birth rate ever recorded in the country. Officials say that the very
things that attract people who revitalize a city--dense vertical housing,
fashionable restaurants and shops and mass transit that makes a car
unnecessary--are driving out children by making the neighborhoods too expensive
for young families.
Timothy Egan, "Vibrant Cities Find One Thing Missing: Children," The New York
Times, March 24, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/NYTchildren
What would it take to have an unsafe plant?
BP Chief Executive John Browne said the company's Texas
City, Texas, refinery ``a very safe plant'' on Thursday as the death toll in
Wednesday's explosion there climbed to 15. It was the third fatal accident at
the mammoth plant in the 12 months. A worker died in a fall last May, and two
were killed and one injured in September when scalding hot water burst from a
pipe.
"BP: Texas Plant 'Safe,' Death Toll at 15," MSNBC News, March 24, 2005
---
http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/breaking/breakingnewsarticle.asp?feed=OBR&Date=20050324&ID=4327330
Technology for the Tower of Babel
One of the HLT unit’s biggest success stories is a
highly efficient system for the creation of pronunciation dictionaries. Davel
explains that the system has been tested on a number of South African languages,
including isiZulu, Setswana, Afrikaans, and Sepedi. Researchers have also
developed a speech synthesis system for isiZulu, which is the first language of
more South Africans—24 percent—than any other. The system, which is now being
tested, enables people with only a reading knowledge of isiZulu to communicate
orally with native speakers. South Africa’s other major area of innovation
involves communication of another sort: the collaborative process that is the
heart of the open-source-software movement. More than 80 percent of the
country’s six-billion-rand (about $1 billion) annual spending on software and
licensing goes to foreign companies, according to the Shuttleworth Foundation’s
Go Open Source campaign. This reliance on proprietary hardware and software
hinders the development of South Africans’ information technology skills and
closes off opportunities for economic growth.
Janet Paterson and Pamela Weaver, "South Africa," MIT's Technology Review,
April 2005 ---
http://www2.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/issue/feature_gp_safrica.asp?trk=nl
The East German experiment failed
It is correct, though, to say that the East German
experiment has failed. The two parts of the country have been drifting apart
since 1997 despite or maybe because of the €85 billion of annual transfers. East
German GDP per person of working age, which peaked at 61% of the West German
level in 1996, has fallen to 59%. There are regions with unemployment levels of
30%, breeding extremism and violence. But even if we took the East out of the
equation, the hard truth is that the West German economy has also been growing
slower than any other country in Western and Central Europe.
Hans-Wermer Sinn, "Germany Outperforms...Moldova," The Wall Street Journal,
March 24, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111161847607888070,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
I might claim the earth is flat if such a
claim was worth over a million to me
Ms. Mapes continues to insist that the story was
accurate, and that the documents were not forged. The book will present a
detailed counterattack against an independent panel's findings that the segment
should not have aired, and will include documentation and analysis that she says
backs up her reporting and which the panel did not release.
"Mary Mapes signs book deal," Crains New York, March 21, 2005 ---
http://www.crainsny.com/news.cms?id=10231
Brave Christian Women's Defiance of Castro
Communist dictator Fidel Castro is both furious and
frightened of a little band of 30 protesters called "the Women in White." But
today -- Easter Sunday -- these brave wives, mothers, daughters and sisters of
imprisoned political dissidents will do what they have done every Sunday for the
past two years.
Bob MacDonald, "The rebel women of Cuba: A brave band holds a mirror up to the
monstrous Castro regime, Toronto Sun, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.canoe.ca/NewsStand/TorontoSun/News/2005/03/27/973657-sun.html
European Union
Development Commissioner Louis Michel has urged Cuban President Fidel Castro to
release imprisoned dissidents during a visit to Cuba to reopen talks between
Brussels and Havana, an EU spokesman says. The Cuban leader expressed interest
in mending relations with Europe during the four-hour meeting that lasted until
1 a.m. on Saturday, Michel's spokesman Amadeu Altafaj Tardio said. EU relations
with Cuba were frozen two years ago after Castro ordered a crackdown on critics
of his one-party Marxist state. "Michel repeated to Castro the unvarying
position of the EU in favour of the release of all.. . .
"EU urges Castro to free dissidents," Reuters UK, March 27, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ReutersMarch27
She just didn't know after all
Australian Health Minister Tony Abbott made news last
month because the man he believed to be his son, Daniel O'Connor, had been
working in the same building. The two were reunited after Mr O'Connor contacted
his birth mother, who said Mr Abbott was his father. But DNA tests - carried out
after another man came forward - have now shown there is no link between the
two.
"Australian MP loses long lost son," BBC News, March 21, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4367921.stm
Lines between online and onsite shopping are
becoming blurred
New technologies and ideas are allowing retailers to
remove the wall between online shopping and in-store shopping, and to make the
gathering of customer data both easier and more valuable. Advanced data-mining
and Web analytics techniques now examine not just what you bought online but
what you viewed, helping retailers design promotions that will entice you to
shop online and in stores. These enticements will themselves arrive over
multiple channels—through magazines, regular mail, e-mail, the Web, and wireless
transmissions to your car or shopping cart. By looking at just a few of a
customer’s purchases, a retailer will even be able to predict how much she’ll
spend over her lifetime, and adjust the deals and promotions it offers her
accordingly. The ultimate goal is more-customized, personal service. The best
retailers have always striven to provide the most-tailored service possible;
however, as more and more retailers expand nationally and even internationally,
building close relationships with customers is increasingly difficult.
“Retailers can’t do that now because they have millions of customers all over
the country,” says Dan Hopping, senior consulting manager for IBM’s Retail Store
Solutions Division. “So they use technology to make the connection.”
Robert Buderi, "E-Commerce Gets Smarter," MIT's Technology Review, April
2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/issue/feature_ecommerce.asp?trk=nl
I don't find this particularly surprising in
this era
Almost a quarter of 14-year-old girls have already had
sex with at least one partner, according to a survey by a teen magazine. The
Bliss magazine study found that most of them did not use protection and that 60%
of them had sex after drinking alcohol. The survey of 2,000 teenage girls
across Britain with an average age of 14.5 years is the most comprehensive of
its kind.
"Is sex survey shocking?" Sky News, March 24, 2005 ---
http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30000-1175926,00.html
Now this I find surprising: I guess he
showed her a thing or two
An Italian woman whose angry husband refused for 7
years to have sex with her was awarded divorce damages by Italy's high court
this week. Francesco launched his "sex strike" in the early 1990s to punish his
wife, Piera, for taking sides against him in a family dispute over money,
according to details of the case reported by local media.
"Italian wins in court after husband's 'sex strike': Court awards damages, says
7-year campaign was unfair ," MSNBC News,
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7294069/
Next time
you order a coffee and babyccino, think of this. The $448,000 quoted as the
average cost of raising two children from birth to age 20 equates to about $30 a
day a child. It costs, say, $3 a day to feed a coffee habit.
"Furious tantrums on show - and that's just the adults," Sydney Morning Herald,
March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/29/1111862390351.html
A computer scientist at Trinity University
told me that a great source for legal studies of copyright and patent law is
Eben Moglen at Columbia University ---
http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/
He runs a blog called "Freedom Now" at
http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/blog
Entries are relatively infrequent and date back to April 2000
There are also a few links to audio and video presentations.
Here's a March 7, 2005 entry at
http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/blog
The United States Department of Justice
announced today that it would be making a radical purchasing
decision: stop dealing with the firm it considers an illegal
monopoly.
No more Microsoft Word at Main Justice.
So they will spend $13 million to acquire Word Perfect licenses from
Corel. Did they consider OpenOffice at $0? Why bother—Let’s just cut
Social Security benefits instead.
The February 16, 2005 entry contains the following quote
from "Freedom and the Robot Army"
The twenty-first century will be different. The United
States will lead the way.
The Pentagon is investing heavily
in the development of robot infantry.
Given the resources it will bring to bear, within two
decades we will see the introduction of machines that
remove all sense of consequences, personal and social,
from the business of killing. Robot infantry may or may
not prove valuable battlefield soldiers. In specialized
roles they will probably succeed in being more
cost-effective than human combatants. But at the violent
suppression of political unrest they will be
unparalleled. A brigade or two will be within the budget
of every autocrat faced with a green or orange or red
revolution. We won’t need them to be torturers, however.
For that, as we have learned, human volunteers are
always available.
|
|
Bob Jensen's thread son copyright law and the
evil DMCA are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm#Copyright
Goggle Hacking for fun and ID theft
All manner of
personal data are left exposed in nooks and crannies of the Web by individuals,
companies and government agencies. Would-be identity thieves can find such
information using the search engines of Google Inc., Yahoo Inc. and other
companies in a technique known as "Google hacking." Security experts held a
contest this month to show just how quick and effective Google hacking can be.
During a technology security-industry meeting in Seattle, contestants using only
Google for less than an hour turned up sensitive information -- potentially
useful for financial fraud -- on about 25 million people. They dug up various
combinations of people's names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, and
credit-card information, including some card numbers apparently left exposed by
the U.S. Department of Justice . . . Google's search engine has cataloged over
eight billion Web pages, recording information from them for later retrieval. In
the process, it collects data that companies and government agencies have
unknowingly left exposed to the public on the Web. Security experts say
incompetence or negligence are mostly to blame for that private data being
publicly accessible. Employees transfer data to computers they assume can be
reached only from within their organizations' networks, when the computers are
in fact configured for public Web access. In other cases, online businesses such
as e-commerce sites never bother to hide their customer data from view of those
who know where to look for it. Once the data are in the search engines' indexes,
individuals are able to find the personal information by searching using special
strings of text known as "Google hacks." Kevin J. Delaney, "Identity
Theft Made Easier: Hackers Use Simple Tricks With Google, Yahoo Searches To Tap
Personal Information," The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page B1
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205677536691444,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Jensen Comment: See
http://johnny.ihackstuff.com/index.php?module=prodreviews
Scientists at the University of California have
designed a molecule to block cat allergies. The report is published in the April
issue of research journal Nature Medicine. This shows great promise for humans
but so far is limited to mice who, in turn, have greater "allergies" to cats.
The article is not yet posted on the Web ---
http://www.nature.com/nm/index.html
Doctors in it for the money should take more
accounting courses and less medical study
Doctors quickly learn that how much they make has
little to do with how good they are. It largely depends on how they handle the
business side of their practice. “A patient calls to schedule an appointment,
and right there things can fall apart,” she said. If patients don’t have
insurance, you have to see if they qualify for a state assistance program like
Medicaid. If they do have insurance, you have to find out whether the insurer
lists you as a valid physician. You have to make sure the insurer covers the
service the patient is seeing you for and find out the stipulations that are
made on that service. You have to make sure the patient has the appropriate
referral number from his primary-care physician. You also have to find out if
the patient has any outstanding deductibles or a co-payment to make, because
patients are supposed to bring the money when they see you. “Patients find this
extremely upsetting,” Parillo said. “ ‘I have insurance! Why do I have to pay
for anything! I didn’t bring any money!’ Suddenly, you have to be a financial
counsellor. At the same time, you feel terrible telling them not to come in
unless they bring cash, check, or credit card. So you see them anyway, and now
you’re going to lose twenty per cent, which is more than your margin, right off
the bat.”
Atul Gawande, "PIECEWORK: Medicine’s money problem," The New
Yorker, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050404fa_fact
Jensen Comment: This partly explains why some very good physicians opt to work
for HMOs. That relieves them of the business and accounting side of their
profession which, in turn, can lead to sleeplessness, hypertension, and
significant losses of fees from their private practices. The "business" of
medicine is really not a very good business in many instances.
Blogging in Iran raises fundamental questions
about blogging in general
So what would a really interesting and exciting
piece of qualitative research on blogging look like? And how would it get around
the problems of overfamiliarity with the phenomenon (on the one hand) and
blogospheric navel-gazing (on the other)? To get an answer, it isn’t necessary
to speculate. Just read “The Vulgar Spirit of Blogging: On Language, Culture,
and Power in Persian Weblogestan,” by Alireza Doostdar, which appears in the
current issue of American Anthropologist. A scanned copy is available
here. The author is now working at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at
Harvard University, where he will start work on his Ph.D. in social anthropology
and Middle Eastern studies. “Weblogestan” is an Iranian online slang term for
the realm of Persian-language blogs. (The time has definitely come for it to be
adapted, and adopted, into Anglophone usage.) Over the last two years, Western
journalists have looked at blogging as part of the political and cultural
ferment in Iran — treating it, predictably enough, as a simple manifestation of
the yearning for a more open society. Doostdar complicates this picture by
looking at what we might call the borders of Veblogestan (to employ a closer
transliteration of the term, as used specifically to name Iranian blogging). In
an unpublished manuscript he sent me last week, Doostdar provides a quick
overview of the region’s population: “There are roughly 65,000 active blogs in
Veblogestan,” he writes, “making Persian the fourth language for blogs after
English, Portugese, and French. The topics for blog entries include everything
from personal diaries, expressions of spirituality, and works of experimental
poetry and fiction to film criticism, sports commentary, social critique, and of
course political analysis. Some bloggers focus on only one of these topics
throughout the life of their blogs, while others write about a different topic
in every new entry, or even deal with multiple topics within a single entry.”
Scott McLemee , "Travels in Weblogestan," Inside Higher Ed, March 29,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/03/29/mclemee
Bob Jensen's threads on blogs and Weblogs are at
http://www.trinity.edu/~rjensen/245glosf.htm#Weblog
New leads on medical causes of some mental
illnesses
A growing number of studies are testing theories that
viruses and other infectious agents may underlie some cases of psychiatric
illnesses. The theory is that viruses and bacteria assaulting the immune system
could also end up affecting the brain in such disorders as autism, depression
and eating disorders. Once considered marginal, this kind of research is gaining
more acceptance in the wider scientific community. Perhaps the greatest strides
in this area of research are those linking obsessive-compulsive disorder and
bacterial infections. Susan Swedo, a researcher at the National Institute of
Mental Health, documented the sudden onset of obsessive-compulsive disorder or
Tourette's syndrome in some children who got strep throat. Dr. Swedo, who has
numerous studies under way, coined the term PANDAS, or pediatric autoimmune
neuropsychiatric disorders associated with streptococcal infections.
Heather Won Tesoriero, "Researchers Probe for Viral Link to Mental Illness:
Studies Examine Whether Bacteria Cause Disorders Such as Autism, Depression,
The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111204806304291201,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Suicide risk increases on college campuses:
Many students are unaware of help services on campus
The new study — which involved interviews with 1,865
students at four large universities — has been accepted for publication in
Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior, the journal of the American Association
of Suicidology. The study was conducted by six researchers, led by John S.
Westefeld, a professor of counseling psychology at the University of Iowa. The
article says that its data suggest that suicide attempts on campuses are
increasing and that “this is one of the most significant findings of this
study.” But it also notes that “it may be the case that what is occurring is
that more students are reporting attempts.” The survey also found that of the
students in the sample: 40 percent had known someone who had attempted suicide.
28 percent had known someone who had committed suicide. 24 percent had thought
about attempting suicide. 9 percent had made a suicide threat. While the
universities in the survey — and colleges generally — have many services for
students who are depressed or suicidal, the study noted an “alarming” statistic:
Only 26 percent of students were aware of the services available.
Scott Jaschik, "Suicide Risk," Inside Higher Ed, March 29, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/29/suicide
What you should know about fresh
spinach: Chances are there's more nourishment in frozen spinach
The sooner you eat that fresh spinach in your
refrigerator, the better. In fact, if you aren't going to cook fresh spinach
promptly, you might want to consider frozen or canned spinach as an alternative,
researchers suggest. Fresh from the ground, spinach is packed with healthy
nutrients, including folate -- a B vitamin that helps prevent the birth defect
spina bifida -- and carotenoids, a form of vitamin A that's needed for
development and may also protect against blindness and cancer. But these healthy
nutrients don't stick around for long. In your refrigerator, spinach loses about
half of these healthy nutrients after eight days. This happens even faster if
stored above the normal 40-degree refrigerator temperature. Keep fresh spinach
cool and minimize storage time. Consider canned and frozen spinach as other
options if you can't eat it soon after buying it.
Michael W. Smith, "Get the Most Out of Your Spinach," WebMD ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/102/106767.htm?z=1728_00000_1000_td_01
What's a college degree worth on average?
The Census Bureau always releases salary data along
with the statistics on educational attainment, as a way to draw attention to the
financial value of education. Average salaries of workers 18 and older area as
follows:
No high school degree: $18,734
High school diploma as highest degree: $27,915
Bachelor’s degree: $51,206
Advanced degree: $74,602
Scott Jaschik, "How Educated We Are," Inside Higher Ed, March 29, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/29/census
Jensen Comment: The above article gives a state-by-state comparison of higher
education degrees among 50 states.
Time for long pants laddie
Scottish politicians are angry at the University of
Cambridge for its policy of barring students from wearing kilts when they
graduate. The BBC reports that pressure is growing on the university to be more
flexible. . . . But the Scottish National
Party's Mike Weir will table a motion urging a rethink on the "elitist" ban. The
university said that graduation regulations had always stressed trousers and
ties for men and dresses or suits for women should be worn. I am confident that
they will be forced to back down Mike Weir SNP MP The decision to ban national
dress, including kilts and army uniforms, came as more and more people took to
wearing them. "Rethink call over Cambridge kilts," BBC News,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/4386595.stm
He didn't say what you have to pray for while
keeping thoughts of him in your prayers
A school board member and prominent lawyer has been
accused of offering legal services in exchange for sexual favors. Steven C.
Copenhaver, 56, was released from jail Thursday on a $750 bond. An arrest
affidavit said Copenhaver offered to represent a woman's husband if she and her
sister-in-law would perform sex acts with him and each other. "I am deeply
apologetic to my family and friends," Copenhaver said in a statement Thursday.
"I hope that all of them will support me during this difficult time. I intend to
work through the legal process to get this behind me as soon as possible. Please
keep me in your prayers."
"Lawyer Will Take Sex in Lieu of Fees," Fox News, March 29, 2005 ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,151742,00.html
Jensen Comment: Bartering is somewhat common but taxable. I wonder if he
would've reported on his tax return?
How the West leads the fight against itself
The principal motive for the rise of fundamentalisms in
recent decades - Islamic, Christian and Jewish - is a reaction against
modernity. That is Western modernity, which combines the material progress that
has been generated by capitalist industrialisation and the humanist culture that
framed it. The provocation has been the nihilistic consequences of humanism. A
movement that started in the Renaissance with the ambition of founding a human-centred
view of existence, to replace the religious one that had preceded it, failed to
find its own answer to the great metaphysical questions that confront all
humans: where do I come from, what should I do with my life, and what happens to
me at death. The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche proposed that with the "death
of God" the truth about existence has become that life is either absurd or
horrible. He satirised the modern individual as the "last man", whose only
interest in life is his digestion; that is, comfort. Nietzsche's bleak view has
been projected ever since in countless works of literature, art and music,
depicting the human condition as meaningless and depressive - Hamlet's "sterile
promontory". The theme also emerged that if death has no sense - merely a
biological event ending in rot and stink - then neither does life. Nihilism -
the belief that there is nothing - is the inevitable end point of the humanist
cultural experiment. Needless to say, humans cannot live with the ultimate
conclusion that this is all there is. So humanist modernity has generated a
range of reactions against itself. Fundamentalism is one. From believing in
nothing there is a leap to the opposite - fanatical attachment to a body of
doctrine that is claimed to be absolute and universal, the word of God himself,
spoken directly through one or other of his chosen prophets. Sigmund Freud would
have included this reaction under his psychological category of "negation" -
where fear that I believe nothing surfaces as its opposite, dogmatic
assertiveness that I know the one Truth. And it is the case that people who
deeply know what they know are usually relaxed in themselves, feeling no need to
assert their faith. The need to convince others cloaks a need to convince
oneself. It is insecurity about belief that triggers intolerant dogma, as
defence. Fundamentalism is a symptom of fragile faith.
John Carroll, "How the West leads the fight against itself," Sydney Morning
Herald, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/27/1111862254583.html
John Carroll is professor of sociology at La Trobe University. This article was
originally published in the Griffith Review: The Lure of Fundamentalism
(ABC Books).
Should the world banking system be denied to
the poor in the name of environmental protection? Who should make these
decisions? This is a tough question that liberals and conservatives must
address. At the moment, world bankers under siege by the greens are not lending
capital to some third world development projects.
What makes the stakes so high is that banking giants Citigroup and Bank of
America have already caved in to RAN (Rainforest Action Network),
following a similar poster assault near the home of Citigroup Chairman Sanford
Weill in 2004. If J.P. Morgan Chase joins these capitulating capitalists, then
that means the three largest financial services companies — thus, virtually an
entire industry — will have ceded control of a portion of their businesses to
anti-business activists and turned their backs on many in the developing world .
. . “The local ‘tribal people,’ however, don’t appear to appreciate her
intervention,” wrote Driessen in his book Eco-Imperialism: Green Power, Black
Death. “One resident angrily called the activists’ handiwork ‘a crime
against humanity,’ because the project would have provided electricity for 5,000
villages; low-cost renewable power for industries and sewage treatment plants;
irrigation water for crops; and clean water for 35 million people.” People in
the third world need economic development. It’s the only truly sustainable
solution for them — and access to the financial services necessary for economic
development is largely in the hands of lenders like J.P. Morgan Chase, with $1
trillion in assets and operations in 50 countries. Appeasing RAN would be an
unconscionable and socially irresponsible business decision for J.P. Morgan
Chase to make and would amount to a shameful betrayal of the millions who look
to this nation and its lenders for hope.
Steven Milloy, "Bank Must Take Stand for Third World," Fox News, March
28, 2005 ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,151446,00.html
Jensen Comment: Of course the bottom line is how responsible the borrowers are
in the use of the development funds. The track records in lesser-developed
countries are not good to date.
Mixing drugs may be bad for blood pressure
The Celebrex label doesn't warn of a drug-interaction
risk with calcium channel blockers, which are a type of drug used to treat blood
pressure and certain heart conditions. It's possible that you are referring to
another category of blood-pressure drugs, commonly called ACE inhibitors.
Celebrex has been shown to reduce the effectiveness of ACE inhibitors, so
patients are warned not to mix the two. In addition, many patients with high
blood pressure aren't aware that drugs like Celebrex, which fall into the
category of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDS, can affect blood
pressure, so anyone being treated for high blood pressure should talk to their
doctor before taking Celebrex or even over-the-counter drugs like Motrin or
Advil. And because recent studies have implicated the drugs Vioxx and Celebrex
in increasing risk for certain heart problems, many doctors now suggest patients
with a history of heart disease, heart attack or angina -- many of whom may be
taking calcium channel blockers -- limit their use of Celebrex and other
anti-inflammatory drugs.
Tara Parker-Pope, "Health Mailbox," The Wall Street Journal, March 29,
2005; Page D3 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205159217991289,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Can you believe this? Why not just rig the
election like he has the power and wealth to do so?
President doles out expensive computers as he
campaigns around the country, in clear violation of electoral rules. President
Robert Mugabe is campaigning across the length and breadth of Zimbabwe
accompanied by three Air Force helicopters packed with more than 100 million US
dollars worth of state-of-the-art Hewlett Packard laptop computers. Depending on
the size of the community, the president doles out between ten and one hundred
computers at each stop on the election trail. Schools are the main beneficiaries
- many of which have been without electricity, textbooks and even roofs for many
years. The money to buy the computers - enough to have imported nearly a million
tonnes of staple maize for a country experiencing widespread crop failure and
hunger - and to fuel the helicopters has come from state coffers in a clear
violation of electoral rules forbidding competing parties from using government
funds to contest elections.
Chipo Sithole, "Mugabe Woos Voters with Laptops," Institute for War & Peace
Reporting (London), March 28, 2005 ---
http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/200503281056.html
Jensen Comment: How can recipients without electricity use the computers? They
can't even recharge the batteries.
Ghost voters in the sky
David Stevens, a white farmer, was shot in the back of
the head. The men were among the first to die as President Mugabe’s reign of
terror unrolled five years ago. But their names are still on the voters’ roll.
Supporters of the Opposition Movement for Democratic Change say that up to a
million phantom voters may appear on the register and that “ghost voters” will
be used by the ruling Zanu (PF) party to inflate the votes that it receives...
Jan Raath, "Ghost voters, rigged ballots and food bribes - the Mugabe route to
power," TimesOnLine, March 29, 2005 ---
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1545637,00.html
The Scalia Court: It's all constitutional
In this week’s issue (March 28, 2005), Margaret Talbot profiles the Supreme
Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Here, she talks to The New Yorker’s Amy Davidson
about Scalia’s legal philosophy, why conservatives love him, and why he makes so
many people so angry . . . In part; he’s so polarizing because he is very clear
and very adamant about the method of constitutional interpretation that he
stands for—originalism—and he has a kind of polemical zeal about making the case
for it. He’s really out there on the law-school speaking circuit, making his
argument in a forceful way; I was impressed to see how willing he is to take
hostile questions and engage with people. He’s also quite funny. The other
Justices tend to give pretty anodyne speeches—talking about their upbringings,
or telling inspirational or educational stories about the great justices and
cases of the past. But Scalia is laying out his approach and telling you in no
uncertain terms how dangerous it is for American democracy and the American
Constitution if judges don’t follow it. Also, his dissents, which are frequent,
are notoriously caustic. He’ll use words like “preposterous” and “irrational” to
describe what he sees as the wrongheaded thinking of his colleagues.
Amy Davidson, "The Scalia Court," The New Yorker, March 21, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/online/content/articles/050328on_onlineonly01
College graduates are back in demand
While campus recruiting has not yet returned to
pre-2001 levels, college grads are back in demand. More than 80 percent of the
employers surveyed by NACE rated the job market for new college grads as good,
very good, or excellent, and the outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas
says the nearly 1.4 million students graduating this spring can expect the
strongest entry-level job market in the past three years. "Recruiters have been
coming to campus and just going through the motions, but now they actually have
jobs to offer," says Larry Routh, director of career services at the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln. The number of recruiters at UNL's February job fair jumped
from 139 last year to 175 this year.
Alex Kingsbury, U.S. News, March 21, 2005 ---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/articles/050321/21college.htm
Surge in accounting undergraduates coupled
with a 17-year low in the number of new accounting professors
Here are some numbers that don't appear to add up. Even
as the accounting profession has endured a torrent of negative publicity, more
college students are enrolling in accounting programs. The enrollments are so
strong that some universities face a problem: a shortage of professors to teach
these young bean-counters . . . However, the comeback of the accounting career
occurs as the number of business doctorates produced is at a 17-year low and
universities struggle to recruit new accounting professors. That leaves many
wondering who will be left to teach all the new rules and regulations to the
growing student pool. While many academic fields are suffering from professor
shortages, the issue is more acute in accounting because of the pull toward
high-paying public-accounting jobs.
Diya Gullapalli, "Interest In Accounting Doesn't Seem to Add Up," The Wall
Street Journal ---
http://www.collegejournal.com/salarydata/accounting/20040802-gullapalli.html
The Born-Again Individualist: Fox News
Channel’s Judge Andrew Napolitano on lying cops, out-of-control government, and
his bestselling new book, Constitutional Chaos
Say what? Who could imagine on Fox Network?
As the highly rated home to the likes of Abu Ghraib
apologist Sean Hannity and the document-shredding constitutional scholar Oliver
North, the Fox News Channel is about the last place you think of when it comes
to quaint values such as due process, defendants’ rights, and restrained
government. Yet Fox is home to television’s fiercest defender of civil
liberties, Judge Andrew Napolitano, the network’s senior judicial analyst and a
regular on The Big Story With John Gibson, Fox and Friends, The O’Reilly Factor,
and other programs. The 54-year-old Napolitano, the youngest life-tenured
Superior Court judge in New Jersey history, is an eloquent and outspoken critic
of government abuse of power, whether the topic is widespread “testilying” by
cops, eminent domain abuse by local and state officials, or the unilateral
detention of suspects at Guantanamo Bay.
New Jersey's Superior Court Judge Judge Andrew Napolitano as interviewed by Nick
Gillespie, "The Born-Again Individualist," ReasonOnLine, March 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/0503/fe.ng.the.shtml
Here's to you Mrs. Robinson: Who perhaps
lies gaga in a nursing home
Ever since
Elaine fled the altar, leapt aboard a bus and rode off into the sunset with
Benjamin nearly 40 years ago, fans of The Graduate have been asking one
question: what happened next? Plans for a sequel to the film - starring Dustin
Hoffman, Katharine Ross and Anne Bancroft as the predatory Mrs Robinson - have
become part of Hollywood mythology. Now the speculation can finally be put to
rest: the sequel has been written. Home School picks up the narrative several
years later. Benjamin is now a father who, scarred by his own education, decides
to teach his children at home. He has not, however, entirely escaped his past,
as the seductive spectre of Mrs Robinson looms once again. But the agonising
wait is not over for devotees yet. Charles Webb, who wrote The Graduate in 1963,
has declared that Home School, which he completed two months ago, will not be
published until after his death. He explained that when he sold the film rights
for The Graduate , a contract clause stated he also signed away the rights to
its characters, meaning that any follow-up could be turned into a film without
his consent. He claims he offered to work with the rights owner, the French
media company Canal Plus, on a big-screen version of Home School but was
rebuffed, so he now intends to leave the novel to his sons in his will.
David Smith, "What happened next? (the author will let you know after he dies),"
Guardian, March 27, 2005 ---
http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,6109,1446288,00.html
Americans, when permitted to choose, still
honor the free expression of moral diversity
To the extent that new biotechnologies need regulation,
agencies should be limited to deciding, as they have traditionally done, only
questions about safety and efficacy. Regulatory agencies also have an important
role in protecting research subjects and patients from force and fraud by
imposing informed consent requirements on researchers. But when people of good
will deeply disagree on moral issues that don't involve the prevention of force
or fraud, it is not appropriate to submit their disagreement to a panel of
political appointees. The genius of a liberal society is that its citizens have
wide scope to pursue their own visions of the good without excessive hindrance
by their fellow citizens. As the Johns Hopkins report shows, Americans, when
permitted to choose, still honor the free expression of moral diversity.
Ronald Bailey, "Whose Biotech Is It, Anyway? Americans reject moral
micromanagement of lifesaving innovations," ReasonOnLine, March 16, 2005
---
http://www.reason.com/rb/rb031605.shtml
Women's
success is when it isn't newsworthy
Neither thinks the job is done. "Let's face it. We live
in a society that loves to discriminate," Mr. Correll said. Ms. Mulcahy added,
"I won't declare victory until there are no lists of high-ranking women, no
dinners honoring companies for promoting them and no reporters thinking that a
woman's success is such a big deal." Ouch. Claudia H. Deutsch.
"Why Word Guys Avoid Numbers," The New York Times, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/business/yourmoney/27suits.html
A phenomenon marketers call "think pink"
It's happening in America, where some companies are
successfully tapping into the psychology of their female customers. For
example, Nike brings mothers together so they can go jogging together. Jane, a
popular magazine for young women, is bringing its content alive by organising
book readings, concerts and chat-show-style formats for its readers. These
companies are effectively tapping into a broader social need for "get-togethers"
or, in its broadest sense, "friendship", a trend Heath and other researchers
predict will strengthen in Australia. "There is still that close network of
girlfriends that women rely on but that greater support they used to get through
community and clubs is not there," Heath says. "But that need has not gone away.
This is going to be a huge opportunity for brands." She also predicts a rise in
products and services that play up the feminine, a phenomenon marketers call
"think pink". Heath cites the return of the white wedding and the growing
popularity of bridal magazines and the girly brand Hello Kitty as evidence. The
latest ad for Bonds has girls in floral underwear dancing among the trees, a far
cry from Sarah O'Hare dressed in a chesty singlet working a garbage truck.
"Five years ago marketers were running a million miles away from anything
feminine or girly as it was seen as condescending to the power woman," Heath
says. The increase in activities such as knitting and scrapbooking is cited as
further evidence. Scrapbooking Memories - Australia's leading scrapbooking
magazine (there's more than one) reported a 44 per cent increase in circulation
to 22,457 sales a month. "Everything that grandma did is cool. It's not doilies
but crocheting iPod covers. There is a desire to do things with your hands.
"Women are turning off the click-point culture of technology and wanting to
create things."
"I am woman, hear me," Sydney Morning Herald, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/27/1111862252594.html?oneclick=true
They will find her analysis of
individual poems quite taxing enough in its upper reaches.
Clearly designed as a come-on for bright students who
don't yet know very much about poetry, Camille Paglia's new book anthologizes 43
short works in verse from Shakespeare through to Joni Mitchell, with an essay
about each. The essays do quite a lot of elementary explaining. Readers who
think they already know something of the subject, however, would be rash if they
gave her low marks just for spelling things out. Even they, if they were honest
enough to admit it, might need help with the occasional Latin phrase, and they
will find her analysis of individual poems quite taxing enough in its upper
reaches. ''Having had his epiphany,'' she says of the sonnet ''Composed Upon
Westminster Bridge,'' ''Wordsworth moves on, preserving his solitude and
estrangement by shutting down his expanded perception.'' Nothing elementary
about that.
Clive James, "'Break, Blow, Burn': Well Versed," The New York Times,
March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/books/review/027JAMESL.htm
US has a moral obligation to enforce
it.
His assertion seems to differ from the mantra-like
statement repeated by those who oppose the
US meddling in the region's affairs, especially following the unofficial
introduction of the US-drafted
Greater Middle East Initiative. Danielle Pletka, the vice-president of the
American Enterprise Institute (AEI),
advocates a contrary opinion. She tells Aljazeera.net that political reform
in the Middle East is not only unavoidable, but that the US has a moral
obligation to enforce it. Otherwise, she argues, it would not be fair to the
rest of the Arab and
Muslim world.
"In pursuit of Arab reform," Aljazeera, May 20, 2004 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/967715B8-276C-4708-AC08-7FD102E13BA7.htm
US gets credit for the start of it
In fact, several countries have seen nonviolent Arab movements for liberty and
self-government recently, but there's only one where there's no doubt the
protests are a consequence of the American invasion of Iraq. That revolt
happened under circumstances that should give pause to hawks and doves alike:
It's the movement in Iraq, led by the Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, that
culminated in January's elections.
Jese Walker, "Behind the Cedars Nonviolent protest in the Middle East,"
ReasonOnLine, March 8, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/links/links030805.shtml
See the U.S. News service ways for finding
college financial aid ---
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/articles/040906/6stories.h.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on financial aid are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob2.htm#EducationInGeneral
Job Insecurity, From the Chief Down
The Fortune 500 have been downsizing for about 30 years
now, and they've been outsourcing. As they've done that, smaller and midsize
firms have been growing much more rapidly. The result is a much more flexible
labor force, one that can take the body blow of change. It's not as rigid as
Europe's labor force. That's beautiful in economic terms, but what it means for
individuals is that more people are working in conditions in which they could be
more easily fired. And they're working with a lot less of a safety net in terms
of benefits and retirement.
Diane C. Swonk as quoted by William J. Holstein in "Job Insecurity, From the
Chief Down," The New York Times, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/27/business/yourmoney/27advic.html
Jensen Comment: But the difference is that the chief gets an undeserved golden
parachute.
These are the same individual given headlines
about their philanthropy
The world's richest individuals have placed $11.5
trillion of assets in offshore havens, mainly as a tax avoidance measure. The
shock new figure - 10 times Britain's GDP - is contained in the most
authoritative study of the wealth held in offshore accounts ever conducted. The
study, by Tax Justice Network, a group of accountants and economists concerned
at the escalating wealth held in offshore locations, shows that the world's
high-net-worth individuals earn $860 billion each year from their assets.
Nick Mathiason, "Super-rich hide trillions offshore," Guardian, March 27,
2005 ---
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,1446120,00.html
Tracing the origins of Homo Economicus
The outline of yet another stage in human economic
development - post-industrial society - slowly emerged in the last part of the
20th century. In a post-industrial society, manufacturing gives way to the
provision of services. The post-industrial economy requires even less land and,
in some respects, labour than its industrial predecessor. While the new regime
requires at least as much physical capital as the old one, its appetite for
knowledge input, mainly in the form of technological innovation, is ravenous.
"The Western world did not arrive at such an agreeable state overnight,"
Bernstein concludes. "It took most of the second millennium to correct
feudalism's suppression of property rights, throw off the intellectual
stranglehold of the Church, overcome the lack of capital markets and rectify the
absence of effective transport and communication. "Only with the completion of
these four tasks have citizens of the new industrial and post-industrial
societies been able to enjoy the fruits of their labours."
Ross Gittins, "Tracing the origins of Homo Economicus," Sydney Morning Herald,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/27/1111862253511.html
This is a review of a book entitled The Birth of Plenty, by William
Bernstein (McGraw-Hill, 2004).
Now may we have a similar device for
MTV, CNN, QVC, and NBC?
This device blocks the reception of the Fox News
Channel. E-mail article Print view Search Most e-mailed Most read RSS It's not
that Sam Kimery objects to the views expressed on Fox News Channel. The creator
of the "Fox Blocker" contends the network is not news at all. Kimery says he
has sold about 100 of the little silver bits of metal that screw into the back
of most televisions, allowing people to filter Fox News from their sets. The
Tulsa, Okla., resident also has received thousands of e-mails, both angry and
complimentary, as well as a few death threats since the device debuted in
August.
Emily Fredrix, "Device lets you out-Fox your TV," Seattle Times, March
27, 2005 ---
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002220590_foxblocker26.html?syndication=rss
The French invented their own device
for tuning out the rest of Europe and Vice Versa
We should spare a sympathetic thought this Easter for
Jacques Chirac. The French president is facing several unpleasant facts. One of
these is that the EU is no longer a projection of France, or a vehicle for
enlarging French influence in the world. The addition of new members has diluted
not only French voting power, but French influence. Not only is French no longer
the main language of the EU at official level, but French policy no longer
prevails as it once did. In a recent speech M Chirac railed against
‘ultra-liberalism’ as “the communism of our age.” His problem is not that
globalization threatens French farmers and manufacturers with cheaper goods from
China and India, but that the new Eastern EU members threaten them from inside
the EU. The barbarians are already inside the gates. The EU Services Directive,
the target for much of his apoplexy, offers the prospect of a vast internal EU
market in services as well as goods, pretty much as was intended and promised.
France, backed by Germany, both with unemployment levels in excess of 10%, is
alarmed at the prospect of Polish plumbers and architects competing with French
ones. M Chirac claims to have had the directive withdrawn, but Tony Blair
disputes this, and points out that qualified majority voting will decide it,
with unanimity not needed.
Madsen Pirie, "Barbaians Inside the Gates," Adam Smith Institute, March 27, 2005
---
http://www.adamsmith.org/blog/archives/001149.php
The French have one thing going for
them --- lots of nuclear power supply. Such is not the case in the U.S.
Your typical city dweller doesn’t know just how much
coal and uranium he burns each year. On Lake Shore Drive in Chicago—where the
numbers are fairly representative of urban America as a whole—the answer is
(roughly): four tons and a few ounces. In round numbers, tons of coal generate
about half of the typical city’s electric power; ounces of uranium, about 17
percent; natural gas and hydro take care of the rest. New York is a bit
different: an apartment dweller on the Upper West Side substitutes two tons of
oil (or the equivalent in natural gas) for Chicago’s four tons of coal. The
oil-tons get burned at plants like the huge oil/gas unit in Astoria, Queens. The
uranium ounces get split at Indian Point in Westchester, 35 miles north of the
city, as well as at the Ginna, Fitzpatrick, and Nine Mile Point units upstate,
and at additional plants in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New Hampshire. That’s
the stunning thing about nuclear power: tiny quantities of raw material can do
so much. A bundle of enriched-uranium fuel-rods that could fit into a
two-bedroom apartment in Hell’s Kitchen would power the city for a year:
furnaces, espresso machines, subways, streetlights, stock tickers, Times Square,
everything—even our cars and taxis, if we could conveniently plug them into the
grid. True, you don’t want to stack fuel rods in midtown Manhattan; you don’t in
fact want to stack them casually on top of one another anywhere. But in suitable
reactors, situated, say, 50 miles from the city on a few hundred acres of
suitably fortified and well-guarded real estate, two rooms’ worth of fuel could
electrify it all.
Peter W. Huber, Mark P. Mills, "Why the U.S. Needs More Nuclear Power," City
Journal, Winter 2005 ---
http://www.city-journal.org/html/15_1_nuclear_power.html
Bomb under some of the most cherished tenets
of the environmental movement
Every now and then comes along a book that throws a
searchlight beam on the nonsense and iniquities of the age. Such was Le Fanu's
account of
the state of decline of scientific medicine in 2000. Now a
highly authoritative book has appeared that puts a bomb under some of the
most cherished tenets of the environmental movement. It is by a retired
professor of organic chemistry from Wrocław. In telling the
true story of a family of organic compounds, it exposes the chicanery, mendacity
and sheer callous inhumanity of the quasi-religious orthodoxy that has seized
control of the media and the political stage across the world.
It is destined to be ignored by
officialdom, but all adherents of science and its methods should feel duty bound
to read it and shout about it.
"Number of the Month," Number Watch, March 2005 ---
http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/2005%20March.htm
What constitutes fair use?
Google is being sued by a French news agency for
infringing on copyright material in its Google News Site. The internet has long
been a cause of struggle between the entrenched rights of copyright holders and
freedom of information. Some feel that all information on the net should be
free, but it is generally acknowledged that most of the content is copyrighted,
and therefore subject to copyright laws. The issue then becomes whether a
particular use of such material constitutes "fair use". There are many sites
that could be affected by the outcome of this lawsuit.
Globetechnology: AFP lawsuit tests fair use of material by Google
From Jerry Trintes' Blog on March 24, 2004 ---
http://www.zorba.ca/blog.html
File swappers' lament
File Swappers on the internet may want to rethink their
position, since Canada may be declaring it illegal in the near future. While
this issue is likely to go on for some time, it is likely in the long term that
the practice will be recognized for what it is - stealing.
Globetechnology: Canada considers file-swap crackdown
From Jerry Trintes' Blog on March 27, 2004 ---
http://www.zorba.ca/blog.html
The website also features articles with
religious messages
In a court hearing today, the American Civil Liberties
Union asked a U.S. District Court in Louisiana to find the Governor’s Program on
Abstinence in contempt of a 2002 order requiring it to keep religion out of the
taxpayer-funded sex education program . . . As the ACLU said in court papers
filed in January, the governor’s program continues to feature religious
materials on its official website, AbstinenceEdu.com. State-appointed experts
advise readers, for example, that "abstaining from sex until entering a loving
marriage will . . . [make you] really, truly, ‘cool’ in God’s eyes" and that
"God is standing beside you the whole way" if you commit to abstinence. The
website also features articles with religious messages, including one that
states, "God chooses this one sin [sex outside of marriage] above all others as
the most destructive to your soul and spirit.
"Reproductive Freedom," ACLU, March 24, 2005 ---
http://www.aclu.org/Focus.cfm?ContentStyle=1&num=10
Jensen Comment: There is an interesting
parallel between the Governor of Louisiana and the President of Harvard. Both
are principal agents of their respective organizations. I would argue that a
principal agent does not have free speech rights enjoyed by persons whose
remarks are less like to impact adversely upon the agencies that the principal
agent represents. Larry Summers' remarks carry highly likely implications that
he is speaking for Harvard. The remarks of any state's governor carry highly
likely implications that he is speaking for state government. Although I'm
generally not happy with the ACLU, I think the point is well taken in this
instance even if the governor started up a personal Website not funded by
his/her state. It would not be controversial if a state governor or the
president of a university ran a Website in which there cannot be any association
of the Website with the principal agent sponsoring the site such that the agency
itself is not directly or indirectly involved.
Four times more likely to have suffered from
racism than they were before
Ethnic minorities living in parts of Britain are now
four times more likely to have suffered from racism than they were before the
last general election, according to one of the most exhaustive studies of race
and crime, undertaken by The Observer . Between 2000 and 2004 racist incidents
reported to the police in England and Wales - anything from verbal abuse to the
most vicious of assaults - rose from 48,000 to 52,700. However, it was the
sparsely populated areas, home to the smallest, most isolated minority
communities, that witnessed the significant increases. North Wales Constabulary
recorded 80 racist incidents in 2000. Last year that jumped to 337, meaning that
more than 4 per cent of the region's 6,000 ethnic minorities experienced some
form of racial intolerance.
Jay Rayner, "Racist attacks on the rise in rural Britain," Guardian,
March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/race/story/0,11374,1446272,00.html
It's not only cruel, it's unhealthy for human
consumption
Yet the reality is that factory-farmed chickens come at
a much higher cost if you consider the conditions in which they are raised.
Broiler chickens are ready for slaughter in 40 to 42 days. The speed with which
they are force-fed to reach this high body weight means that birds' hearts and
lungs cannot keep up and they frequently die of heart failure when they are only
a few weeks old. Animal welfare charity Compassion in World Farming estimates
that up to 88 million broilers die of heart failure in the EU each year. Leg
disorders are also common, with 30 per cent of birds limping or severely lame,
as are blisters, infections, cannibalism and heat stress. But it is not just
the welfare of the chickens that suffers from cheap production; so does the
health of those eating them. Despite the fact that chicken is promoted as
low-fat, high-protein food, research last year from the Institute of Brain
Chemistry and Human Nutrition at London Metropolitan University found that fat
content in chicken has more than doubled since 1940 as a result of factory
farming.
"Pain and early death: the true cost of your Easter chicken," Guardian,
March 27, 2005 ---
http://shopping.guardian.co.uk/ethicalshopping/story/0,11951,1446150,00.html
This is for the birds
The strange case of the homosexual necrophiliac
duck pushed out the boundaries of knowledge in a rather improbable way when it
was recorded by Dutch researcher Kees Moeliker. It may have ruffled a few
feathers, but it earned him the coveted Ig Nobel prize for biology awarded for
improbable research, and next week he will be recounting his findings to UK
audiences on the Ig Nobel tour.
Don MacLeod, "Necrophilia among ducks ruffles research feathers," Guardian,
March 8, 2005 ---
http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/research/story/0,9865,1432991,00.html
Casualties in Russia's culture wars
Culture wars over blasphemous art, such as Andres
Serrano's urine-dipped crucifix or Chris Ofili's elephant dung-decorated
Madonna, have flared up periodically in the United States in recent years. A
similar conflict is now raging in post-Soviet Russia. But there, the debate is
not about whether taxpayer money should be used for museum displays that offend
some people's religious beliefs. It's about whether a provocative exhibition at
a privately owned museum should be a crime with harsh penalties for the accused
blasphemers.
Cathy Young, "Religion in Art? Nyet! Casualties in Russia's culture wars,"
ReasonOnLine, March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/cy/cy032305.shtml
The neglected significance of California's
same-sex marriage ruling
Under California law, Adam may legally marry Eve, but
not Steve. Since the difference between what's permitted and what's forbidden is
the gender of Adam's prospective partner, reasoned Kramer, the law discriminates
according to gender. That the law restricts men and women alike from marrying
someone of the same sex, argued Kramer, no more immunizes it from review as an
"equally applicable" law than does an anti-miscegenation statute requiring
whites and blacks equally to marry someone of the same race. This last argument
is the truly interesting one, because it has potential applications outside the
marriage context. If state discrimination against gay couples—as opposed to gay
individuals, who still have not been ruled to constitute a suspect class—is
viewed as gender discrimination subject to strict scrutiny, then the state must
supply not merely a "rational basis" for legislation to pass constitutional
muster, but rather advance a "compelling state interest" for making a
distinction. If the California Supreme Court agrees with that aspect of Kramer's
reasoning, it will set a precedent for a far higher level of protection for gay
families than they have heretofore enjoyed.
Julian Sanchez, "Protecting Adam and Steve : The neglected significance of
California's same-sex marriage ruling," ReasonOnLine, March 15, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/links/links031505.shtml
NYC Law versus the Christian Ministries
In May the New York Post reported that the Salvation Army, which has provided
social services and Christian ministry to the poor around the world for more
than 125 years, could be pulling out of New York City rather than provide health
insurance benefits to domestic partners of gay employees, as New York City law
may soon require. The legislation, passed in May, would require all businesses
and nonprofits that have contracts with the city worth at least $100,000 to
provide the benefits. At this writing, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a
moderate and generally pro–gay rights Republican, is suing to block enforcement
of the legislation, which is also vehemently opposed by Catholic Charities. (One
of Bloomberg’s appointees to the city’s Human Rights Commission, National Gay
and Lesbian Task Force Executive Director Matt Foreman, resigned from the
commission over the mayor’s position on this issue.)
Cathy Young, "God or Mammon: When religious groups get caught between their
principles and their subsidies," ReasonOnLine, March 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/0503/co.cy.god.shtml
There is no doubt that the six million-euro
ransom will soon be put to use killing more Iraqis and Americans (but not
Italians since they're going home)
The story - that U.S. troops just suddenly opened up on
the one car carrying a just-released journalist and her Italian secret service
driver - never made sense. In the absence of any real indication of what
happened, the more likely story is that the driver was using evasive driving
tactics to skirt U.S. checkpoints and troops. That sort of thing does not go
unnoticed by soldiers, not after months in-country. Even less sensible is Sgrena'
claim that she was somehow targeted by U.S. troops, yet made it home. The far
bigger issue is the attempt to secretly pay ransom for Sgrena' release. There is
no doubt that the six million-euro ransom will soon be put to use killing more
Iraqis and Americans. Further, it guarantees that more Western hostages will be
taken, especially European ones, female if possible. This is not the moral high
ground, and the Italian government and Sgrena know it.
"The Six-Million Euro Woman," ReasonOnLine, March 8, 2005 ---
http://www.reason.com/re/030805.shtml
Jensen Comment: Sgrena will rant all the way to the bank where she deposits
more than $6 million in book royalties and finding that it pays hard cash to
bash America.
Surprise! Surprise!
The wit and wisdom of Mikey Scars emerges in hundreds
of pages of FBI reports obtained by the Daily News that recount the history of
the Gambino family before, during and after Gotti's volatile reign. In hours of
FBI debriefing sessions at secret locations, DiLeonardo said that even with
Gotti's power on the wane, the family continued to cast its shadow in some
remarkable corners of New York.
Greg B. Smith, "The long tentacles of the mob: FBI reports offer quite a talen:
NY Daily News, March 27, 2005 ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/293764p-251510c.html
Weakness of European shareholder democracy
A new study prepared for the Association of British
Insurers (ABI) by Deminor Rating, a Belgian governance consultancy, highlights
the weakness of European shareholder democracy. As the chart shows, only
two-thirds of the big European firms included in the FTSE Eurofirst 300 index
operate a rule of one share, one vote. In the other third of firms, power tends
to be concentrated in the hands of a minority of big shareholders who control a
majority of the voting rights.
"What shareholder democracy?" Economist, March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/business/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3793305
The history of medicine is filled with
shameful suppressions of important advances
Americans want to know how good their doctors and
hospitals are. But the government does not reward good performance — judged by
whether patients get better. It rewards only good conformance — for medical
providers who follow its recipes. The government specifies its recipes like the
11th Commandment. But there is no one recipe for medical care. Treatments must
be tailored to patients. Are drugs that lower blood pressure really mandatory
for all heart failure patients, as the government avers? Doctors who keep blood
pressure slightly elevated in their elderly patients' rigid vessels surely don't
agree. Further, medicine is the youngest science, with frequent flip-flops in
accepted treatment. Yesterday's must-dos, Vioxx and antidepressants, are today's
tort lawyer bonanzas. Government recipes are delineated primarily through “peer
review,” not scientific experiments. Although the title implies saintly
physicians dispassionately evaluating each other's work, medical “peers” become
brass-knuckle fighters when innovators threaten their expertise. The history of
medicine is filled with shameful suppressions of important advances.
Regina E. Herzlinger, "Uncle Sam is no doctor: Instead of tracking outcomes,
system prescribes medical ‘recipes.', "USA Today, March 29, 2005, Page
10A ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050329/oppose29.art.htm
Jensen Comment: Regina is a former faculty member of the Harvard Business
School
Guess what causes the most bite injuries in
the U.K.? Hint: It goes woof!
Bizarre accidents including melting pyjamas, being
attacked by an alligator and bitten by centipedes put almost 1 million Britons
in hospital last year, it emerged today. Volcanic eruptions, lightning strikes,
lizard bites and hornet stings caused some of the more unusual injuries listed
by the Department of Health (DoH). Accidents cost the NHS about Ł1bn a year. The
most common cause of injury was falling, which led to 119,203 admissions to
casualty. Thousands suffered attacks from a wide variety of animals. These
included 451 people stung by hornets, 46 bitten by venomous snakes and lizards,
24 bitten by rats, 15 injured in contact with a marine mammal, two people bitten
by centipedes and one attacked by an alligator. But dogs accounted for most
injuries with 3,508 people suffering bites.
"Brits hurt by melting pyjamas, alligators and centipedes," The Guardian,
March 29, 2005 ---
http://society.guardian.co.uk/health/story/0,7890,1447436,00.html
I repeated this one from the March 30 edition
of Tidbits since people contacted me about this provocative piece by an
Australian sociology professor.
The principal motive for the rise of fundamentalisms in
recent decades - Islamic, Christian and Jewish - is a reaction against
modernity. That is Western modernity, which combines the material progress that
has been generated by capitalist industrialisation and the humanist culture that
framed it. The provocation has been the nihilistic consequences of humanism. A
movement that started in the Renaissance with the ambition of founding a
human-centred view of existence, to replace the religious one that had preceded
it, failed to find its own answer to the great metaphysical questions that
confront all humans: where do I come from, what should I do with my life, and
what happens to me at death. The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche proposed that
with the "death of God" the truth about existence has become that life is either
absurd or horrible. He satirised the modern individual as the "last man", whose
only interest in life is his digestion; that is, comfort. Nietzsche's bleak view
has been projected ever since in countless works of literature, art and music,
depicting the human condition as meaningless and depressive - Hamlet's "sterile
promontory". The theme also emerged that if death has no sense - merely a
biological event ending in rot and stink - then neither does life. Nihilism -
the belief that there is nothing - is the inevitable end point of the humanist
cultural experiment. Needless to say, humans cannot live with the ultimate
conclusion that this is all there is. So humanist modernity has generated a
range of reactions against itself. Fundamentalism is one. From believing in
nothing there is a leap to the opposite - fanatical attachment to a body of
doctrine that is claimed to be absolute and universal, the word of God himself,
spoken directly through one or other of his chosen prophets. Sigmund Freud would
have included this reaction under his psychological category of "negation" -
where fear that I believe nothing surfaces as its opposite, dogmatic
assertiveness that I know the one Truth. And it is the case that people who
deeply know what they know are usually relaxed in themselves, feeling no need to
assert their faith. The need to convince others cloaks a need to convince
oneself. It is insecurity about belief that triggers intolerant dogma, as
defence. Fundamentalism is a symptom of fragile faith.
John Carroll, "How the West leads the fight against itself," Sydney Morning
Herald, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/27/1111862254583.html
John Carroll is professor of sociology at La Trobe University. This article was
originally published in the Griffith Review: The Lure of Fundamentalism
(ABC Books). You can read more about him at
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/socsci/staff/carroll/carroll.htm
How to sleep better without pills
With complaints on the rise, the medical profession
is stepping up its focus on the treatment of sleep disorders. Earlier this month
the American Board of Medical Specialties recognized sleep medicine as an
official subspecialty for physicians in a number of areas, including internal
medicine and neurology. Specialists are finding success with a range of
behavior-based therapies that offer long-term solutions to insomnia. With these
methods, doctors say they can teach patients to alter their thoughts and actions
and break the cycle of sleeplessness, with little or no reliance on drugs.
Jennifer Corbet Dooren, "Talking
Yourself to Sleep: Behavioral Therapies Teach Insomniacs to Snooze Without
Relying on Drugs, The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205598498291410,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
This would be one for Comedy Central if it
wasn't about such a serious topic
In the original Three Amigos, our heroes went to a
Mexican town to perform their Hollywood act, and were shocked to find that the
banditos they encountered in mid-yippee were using real bullets. Somebody ought
to slip that DVD into W's player tonight.
Jed Babbin, "Loose Canons The Three Amigos Summit," The American Spectator,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=7945
Are low-sugar cereals really healthier?
Jennifer Hardee of California filed the suit Thursday
in the Superior Court of California in San Diego County. She alleged that the
low-sugar cereals falsely represent "that they offer a nutritional advantage
over defendants' full-sugar breakfast cereal products, when in fact, the removed
sugar is replaced by other carbohydrates, thus offering no significant
nutritional advantage." The complaint, which seeks class-action status, lists
the reduced-sugar versions of Post's Fruity Pebbles from Kraft, General Mills'
Cocoa Puffs and Trix, and Kellogg's Frosted Flakes. The suit seeks restitution
for the cost of the low-sugar cereal purchased since the introduction of the
low-sugar varieties by California consumers who believed the new cereals were
healthier. The suit also seeks other damages to be determined.
Sarah Ellison, "Suit Challenges 'Low-Sugar' Cereals: Carbohydrates Contained In
New Breakfast Varieties Cited in California Action," The Wall Street Journal,
March 28, 2005; Page B6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111198224246790724,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Making Muslims Part of the Solution
Muslims are a distinct minority in the U.S., variously
estimated at between three and six million adherents. There are over 30 million
in Europe. Most of the 1.2 billion Muslims in the world are in Africa and Asia.
They fall into two main groups, Sunni and Shiite, with conflicting claims to
succession from the Prophet Muhammad dating back to the seventh century.
Muhammad founded Islam on monotheism, taking as his antecedents Abraham, Moses
and Jesus. Thus Islam claims the same origins as Judaism and Christianity. But
Muhammad made the singular claim that he was the last prophet of God's word.
Muhammad was a different kind of prophet also in the sense that he was temporal
ruler as well, building his political base in Medina and then conquering the
Arab city that had once rejected him, Mecca. After his death, in June 632 by
traditional account, Arabs rapidly built an empire stretching from the gates of
the Mediterranean to the far side of India, spreading Islam as they went. On the
whole, they were tolerant of Christians and Jews in the lands they conquered,
acknowledging that all three religions claimed the same origins. Today, Muslim
intolerance as manifested in al Qaeda, strict religious laws in Iran and the
social strictures against women in Saudi Arabia, is regarded, in the first two
instances at least, as a threat to other peoples and religions. It is this image
that plagues moderate Muslims. In the U.S., they are dealing with it the way
other minorities have done, by getting involved in the political process.
George Melloan, "Making Muslims Part of the Solution," The Wall Street
Journal, March 29, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205503593491358,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Israelis toast Arab footballers
For years, Abas Suan and Walid Badir endured racist
taunts from the bleachers. Now they're the toast of the predominantly Jewish
state. Badir scored Israel's only goal in a 1-1 tie with France on Wednesday in
a World Cup qualifying match, repeating Suan's feat in a Saturday match against
Ireland, keeping Israel in contention for a slot in the prestigious tournament.
"Israelis toast Arab footballers," Aljazeera, March 31, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F0328E76-38EF-454F-8A69-8646635A1904.htm
Won't the Europeans simply seek out the
fatter and fuller non-European version of the Windows operating system? The
slimmer version seems to me to be a stupid idea for just one sector of the
world.
Microsoft Corp. and the European Commission agreed
the software giant can sell a stripped-down version of its Windows operating
system under the name "Windows XP Home Edition N," Microsoft said. Microsoft's
Windows XP Professional Edition will also include the "N" for versions sold in
Europe without its Windows Media Player audiovisual software. The deal
represents a small step in Microsoft's long battle with the EU's executive body,
which last year ruled the U.S. software giant had abused the near-monopoly of
Windows to crush competition and fined it nearly €500 million ($650 million).
The commission ordered Microsoft to sell a version of Windows without its Media
Player and the two clashed over a suitable name.
"Microsoft, EU Agree On Slimmer Version Of Windows System," The Wall Street
Journal, March 29, 2005; Page B5 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111202539653090934,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Jensen Comment: Perhaps the European's just don't understand Gresham's law ---
http://www.eh.net/encyclopedia/?article=selgin.gresham.law
Gresham's law - first articulated in the
sixteenth century - may have some interesting applications for the twenty-first
century in situations where money takes the form much more prominently of
accounting entries rather than of coins in circulation. ---
http://www.tdctrade.com/econforum/hkma/hkma021001.htm
It must be nice to get paid nearly $20
million for cheating
Bank of America Corp., which has paid more than $1
billion during the past year in scandal-related settlements and penalties while
absorbing a huge acquisition, paid its chairman and chief executive, Kenneth
Lewis, a total of $19.3 million in compensation, according to a proxy filing
with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The 57-year-old Mr. Lewis, in his
fourth year of running the Charlotte, N.C., company, which ranks third in assets
among U.S. banks, received a salary of $1.5 million, unchanged from 2003. His
bonus rose 6% to $5.7 million from $5.4 million a year earlier.
Betsy McKay, "Bank of America Pays Its CEO $19.3 Million Amid Penalties: Total
for Lewis Followed $1 Billion in Settlements, Absorption of Acquisition," The
Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page A6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205640746091429,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's Fraud Updates area at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudUpdates.htm
Bob Jensen's "Rotten to the Core" threads on banking are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Big Employer is listening to your "personal"
conversations
Many recent college graduates and young
professionals are avid users of social-networking sites that are blossoming
across the Internet. But as Mr. Silverman's case makes clear, the information on
these sites can leak into a job search, sometimes hurting one's chances of
landing a position. Popular sites for the 35-and-under crowd, such as
Friendster.com, Ryze.com and LinkedIn.com, which together have more than 18
million members, typically work in the same way. New members spend time filling
out forms with personal information, from marital status and favorite movies to
educational background and résumé details. Some even have space for photos.
Then, they set out to create a network, searching the site for friends,
colleagues and peers. As personal networks grow, members can voyeuristically
browse the profiles of friends-of-friends-of-friends; if a stranger catches
their eye, they usually can find someone in their own network to broker an
introduction.
Jessica Mintz, "Social-Networking Sites Catch the Eye of Employers," The Wall
Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page B6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111206247812691607,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Technology versus tradition in educating deaf
children
So-called cochlear implants -- electronic devices
surgically placed in the bone behind the ear -- have been around for two
decades. But it was only five years ago that the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration approved the devices for use in children as young as 12 months.
Now a new generation of children is entering deaf schools with the hope that
they may someday hear and speak almost as naturally as those without hearing
problems. As this happens, it is reshaping a longstanding battle over how deaf
children should be educated. Supporters of the venerable culture built up by
deaf people believe deaf children should get a strong grounding in American Sign
Language so they can participate fully in that culture when they grow up. But
others -- including some deaf kids' parents who can hear -- want more emphasis
on hearing and speaking English to prepare the children for life in the
mainstream world. Now the implants are boosting their cause. More than 90% of
deaf children are born to hearing parents.
Paul Davies, "Toddlers' Implants Bring Upheaval To Deaf Education: Cochlear
Devices Help Kids Join Mainstream Classes; Will Sign Language Die? A Picket
Against Dr. Green," The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111205074655191265,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Historical myths versus
reality
. . . in "Bound for Canaan" (Amistad, 540 pages,
$27.95), Fergus M. Bordewich illuminates the lives and times of the Underground
Railroad's stationmasters, conductors and passengers. He has written an
excellent book that is probably as close to a definitive history as we're likely
to see
. . . When the
Underground Railroad was running, frustrated Southerners imagined it to be much
more extensive than it really was. Today Americans are likely to overstate its
significance because they want examples of moral virtue to make up for a
national stain. As Mr. Bordewich notes, there is a "national fairy tale" quality
to the Underground Railroad, and any serious chronicle must break through "the
hard sheen of myth." "Bound for Canaan" offers several myth-busting
lessons, including the unsurprising fact that few of the movement's white
leaders subscribed to 21st-century notions of racial equality. One of the most
influential figures
John J. Miller, "Destination, Freedom," The Wall Street Journal, March
29, 2005; Page D6 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111206438089891665,00.html?mod=opinion&ojcontent=otep
When must your eBay revenues be reported on
your Federal tax return?
More than 135 million people have registered to use the
auction site that calls itself "the world's online marketplace." Buyers bought
more than $34 billion worth of merchandise there last year. Some people make
money by cleaning out items from their closets; others use the site to run small
businesses. "When you're working on the Internet, it's kind of a gray issue,"
said Bart Fooden, a certified public accountant in Woodbury, N.Y., who advises
small businesses and individuals. "The big issue is whether you're doing it as a
business or not." The IRS can apply a list of nine indicators that might prove
whether someone's online auctions amount to a business. These indicators include
evidence that the taxpayer depends on the income, acts in a businesslike manner,
or puts enough time and effort into the activity to suggest a profit motive.
Mary Dalrymple, "IRS May Consider EBay Sales Taxable Income," Washington Post,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6111-2005Mar28.html?referrer=email
I wonder if job applicants my take on any
personality they think will win them a job?
Even before the candidates had stepped through the door
for the group interview, their fate had been largely determined by a computer.
They had taken a 50-minute online test that asked them to rate to what degree
they agreed or disagreed with statements such as, "It's maddening when the court
lets guilty criminals go free," "You don't worry about making a good impression"
and "You could describe yourself as 'tidy'."
Ariana Eunjung Cha, "Employers Relying On Personality Tests To Screen
Applicants," Washington Post, March 27, 2005, Page A01 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A4010-2005Mar26.html?referrer=email
Perhaps job applicants should instead take
the Gone2thedogs.com test
Here’s a web site that they mentioned on Good Morning
America earlier. It’s called Gone2thedogs.com; it will have you take a short
10-question test that will let you know what kind of dog you would be. It’s a
hoot. My results were that I’m a German Spitz! Try it. ---
http://www.gone2thedogs.com/
Debbie Bowling at Trinity University
I wonder what jobs Hitler would qualify for
in this day in age: For Hitler history buffs
The rare 1943 document was among the papers discovered in Cornell University
Law School's collection from the Nuremberg war crimes trials. The psychological
profile of the Nazi dictator is now available on the law library's Web site. The
report said that if Germany were to lose the war, Hitler might kill himself.
Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker in late April 1945.
"Harvard Study: Hitler Held Grudges, Craved Attention," WFTV.com, March
30, 2005 ---
http://www.wftv.com/news/4328039/detail.html
Hitler's personality document, newly discovered, in the
Law Library at Cornell University is at
http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/library/donovan/hitler/
Also see
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/31/science/31hitler.html
Hitler Flap at Middlebury College
A photographic illustration included in the March
17, 2005 issue of The Middlebury Campus has attracted the attention of major
media outlets and prompted President Ronald D. Liebowitz to condemn the
illustration in a campus-wide e-mail sent on March 25. The photo illustration,
which is a modified photograph of former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani
including a Hitler-style mustache and haircut, was published alongside an
opinions submission by Ben Gore '05.
"Giuliani graphic elicits widespread condemnation,"
MiddleburyCampus.com, March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.middleburycampus.com//
See the photo and article at
http://www.middleburycampus.com/news/895684.html?mkey=503123
Jensen Comment: The editor of the Middlebury Campus resigned and
the president of the college, Ronald Liebowitz, wrote a letter condemning the
illustration, which, he says, "reflects a gross misunderstanding of history, let
alone of Mr. Giuliani's record."
I don't think personality differences account
for these salary differentials
Black and Asian women with bachelor's degrees earn
slightly more than similarly educated white women, and white men with four-year
degrees make more than anyone else. A white woman with a bachelor's degree
typically earned $37,800 in 2003, compared with $43,700 for a college-educated
Asian woman and $41,100 for a black woman, according to data to be released
Monday by the Census Bureau. Hispanic women took home $37,600 a year. The
bureau did not say why the differences exist. Economists and sociologists
suggest several possible factors: the tendency of minority women, especially
blacks, to more often hold more than one job or work more than 40 hours a week,
and the tendency of black professional women who take time off to have a child
to return to the work force sooner than others. Employers in some fields may
give financial incentives to young black women, who graduate from college at
higher rates than young black men, said Roderick Harrison, a researcher at the
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a research organization in
Washington.
"Income Gaps Found Among the College-Educated," The New York Times, March
28, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/28/education/28income.html?
Shared travel experiences
TravelPost.com (
www.travelpost.com ) has
launched a free service designed to let people store and share personal travel
experiences online, using tools for creating illustrated diaries and itinerary
maps. Users are encouraged to rate cities, hotels and restaurants they have
visited, information that becomes searchable by other users to help them plan
vacations and business trips.
Leslie Walker, "Online Scrapboooks Let Globetrotters Trace Their Travels,"
Washington Post, March 27, 2005; Page F07
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2609-2005Mar26.html?referrer=email
Some taxpayers are having some shared travel
(offshore) experiences: It's not nice to fool with Mother IRS
Everson said more than 90 percent of those who
participated in the shelter, popular in the 1990s, were wealthy individuals.
Others included business owners and corporations. He said this project dwarfed
previous efforts to pursue tax evaders. A program to crack down on improper use
of offshore credit cards netted $270 million, equivalent to the amount paid by
just three individuals in the "Son of Boss" initiative. One person paid back
more than $100 million and the average was nearly $1 million. "This was not a
bargain-basement deal," he said. Under the terms of the program, people were
required to pay back 100 percent of the claimed tax losses and pay a penalty of
either 10 percent or 20 percent. Those who choose to litigate their case instead
of participating in the initiative face assessment of the maximum penalty of 40
percent. Everson added that those who go to court will be publicly named, while
the IRS does not make public the names of those participating in the settlement.
Jim Abrams, "Crackdown on Tax Shelter Nets IRS $3.2 Billion," SmartPros,
March 25, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x47533.xml
Some of the above taxpayers might've learned
not to fool Mother IRS if they'd taken a required high school course now being
proposed in the Texas legislature
HB 492 would require personal finance education for
high school graduation. According to the National Council on Economic Education,
such requirements already exist in seven states: Alabama, Georgia, Idaho,
Illinois, Kentucky, New York, and Utah. In his remarks, Polansky pointed to
statewide research conducted by TSCPA showing that only 20 percent of Texans pay
their credit card debt in full each month. Fifty percent of respondents say they
didn't learn about the need for financial planning and the importance of savings
until they were in their 30s. TSCPA's research also found 26 percent of Texans
say they aren't saving any money for retirement. Texas CPAs believe teaching
money management principles to high school students better prepare them for
sound financial decision-making as adults.
"CPA Society Supports Bill Requiring High School Financial Education ,"
SmartPros, March 28, 2005 ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x47554.xml
It's not nice to play with someone else's
patented technology
San Jose-based Immersion Corp. sued Sony in 2002,
claiming it violated two of its patents. A federal jury in Oakland decided in
favor of Immersion in September and ordered Sony to pay $82 million in damages.
On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken affirmed the decision tacking on
$8.7 million in interest.
Mathew Fordhaul, "Sony to Pay $90.7M in PlayStation Case," ABC News,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory?id=620454
Jensen Comment: The fine is chicken feed to Sony. But the court's ban on
future sales is a serious blow.
Good Dating Seal of Approval from the State
of Michigan
Some lawmakers, though, say that as online dating
becomes more popular, users need better protection from predators. Twenty-six
million people visited dating sites in January, according to the Internet
research firm Nielsen/NetRatings. The Senate is considering legislation that
would require an Internet dating company serving Michigan residents to disclose
on its Web site whether it has conducted criminal background checks on users,
based solely on the names provided.
David Eggert, "Michigan May Require Online Dating Checks," ABC News, March 28,
2005 ---
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=619978
Advice on leaving your personal computer
files to you distant ancestors
Burning material to the disk itself is a snap, thanks
to built-in tools most operating systems now have. There's also advanced
programs, such as those from Roxio (www.roxio.com)
or Nero (www.nero.com),
that help organize material into folders. One warning: Do not compress files to
save space. You may not be able to decompress them in 2015. Software that allows
you to organize your archive across multiple disks, like Genie-Soft (www.genie-soft.com),
can be handy as well, but test it by trying to open the files directly without
using the backup program.
Joab Jackson, "Create an Electronic Archive," Washington Post,
March 27, 2005; Page M03 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A64566-2005Mar24.html?referrer=email
Bob Jensen's computer helpers are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm
Filene's is a famous department store in
Boston
Filene's Puts $11 Price Tags on Its Coats and Suits --
Then Calls Cops: Stampeding men and women so overtaxed a Boston store's
facilities that the doors had to be closed twice within the first half-hour. A
dozen Boston bluecoats were on hand to maintain order.
The Wall Street Journal, March 29, 1949
Jensen Comment: One of the memorable moments in my life was back in
1969 when I was in the bargain basement at Filene's. Several women were so
frenetic about the bargain prices on slacks and dresses that they were running
around in their underwear (in those days garter belts and hose) trying on
clothes beside the clothing racks. And yes, there were uniformed police at
various points in the basement trying to maintain order but not dress codes. I
don't think there even were dressing rooms in the bargain basement.
I think much of this anticipated technology
failed, although it may have saved on energy usage
Many more foods may soon be sprayed out of aerosol cans
at the flick of the housewife's finger. The possibilities range from "instant
milk," which can be kept unrefrigerated on shelves, to such things as
mayonnaise, pancake mix and peanut butter.
The Wall Street Journal, March 28, 1961
North Korea
acknowledged for the first time an outbreak of bird flu at poultry farms near
its capital, in a sign that the deadly avian virus endemic in Southeast Asia
could be greatly expanding its geographic reach. Pyongyang's official news
agency reported Sunday that hundreds of thousands of chickens had been destroyed
in an effort to curb the spread of the disease, which had killed birds at "a few
chicken farms."
Gordon Fairclough, "North Korea Acknowledges Bird Flu," The Wall Street
Journal, March 28, 2005; Page A9 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111197882571490670,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Madeleine Albright, and not some
neoconservative in the Bush administration, who insisted that the U.S. would act
"with allies if possible, alone when necessary."
Indeed, the cave-in of the Democrats is hardly
surprising. After all, it was Madeleine Albright, and not some neoconservative
in the Bush administration, who insisted that the U.S. would act "with allies if
possible, alone when necessary." And it is former U.S. permanent representative
to the United Nations, Richard Holbrooke, who has argued repeatedly and
eloquently for the need for U.S. military interventions to right certain human
rights wrongs. And it has been liberal interventionist intellectuals like
Michael Ignatieff and Samantha Power who have, in effect, argued, to use the
phrase British Prime Minister Tony Blair did at the time of the Kosovo
intervention, for wars based on "values not interests." Nor are the Bush
administration's arguments about political stability, respect for human rights,
and economic prosperity being the byproduct of democracy somehow outside the
mainstream. To the contrary, they are at the core of the theories of the single
most respected liberal economist in the world today, Amartya Sen. So, if
anything, the liberal interventionist critics of the administration probably
have more in common with this kind of armed democracy-building than they would
ever be comfortable admitting on matters of principle, if not on the details of
how these policies should be implemented, what role should be assigned to the
use of force, to multilateralism, international legal regimes, the U.N., and a
host of other concerns. In other words, if the contest is between different
forms of commitment to interventionism in the name of democracy, liberal
capitalism, the rule of law, and human rights, it seems obvious that the
administration has the more consistent argument (though cynics can of course
debate their sincerity). After all, it is rather difficult to claim that it was
a good thing to overthrow Slobodan Milosevic, and that there should be an
intervention in Darfur, but that somehow Saddam Hussein was off limits. In the
battle between the muscular utopianism of the right and the pale utopianism of
the left, there really isn't much of a contest. And yet, it is precisely the
utopianism of this interventionist project, whether defined in Richard
Holbrooke's terms or Paul Wolfowitz's, that has led me at least to a
re-education in realism. These doubts have two sources: the actual degree of
success the U.S. has attained in Iraq and in the Middle East, and, far more
importantly, the wisdom of such engagements, whether or not they succeed.
David Rieff, "Muscular Utopianism," The Wall Street Journal, March 28,
2005; Page A16 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111196968791190532,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Few see us as we are,
but everyone sees what we pretend to be.
Niccolň Machiavelli
Jensen Comment: But at least a few eventually see through what we're pretending
to be.
Colorado University is a "lunatic asylum"
says one of its inmates
Both Ward Churchill and one of his legislative critics
compared the University of Colorado to an asylum this weekend — showing that the
debate over the controversial professor has not been put to rest by a university
review released Thursday. Churchill says that the new investigation requested
by the review — this time an inquiry into whether he engaged in plagiarism and
other forms of research misconduct — is unfair. In a speech in San Francisco
Friday night, he said that the new investigation at Colorado, which will examine
among other things his claims of being an American Indian, was befitting to a
“lunatic asylum,” and he vowed not to cooperate with the investigation,
according to a report in The Rocky Mountain News.
Scott Jaschik, "Churchill Wars Continue," Inside Higher Ed, March 28,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/28/churchill
Bob Jensen's threads on Ward Churchill are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyChurchill.htm
Continued War and Peace at
Columbia University: It's amazing how this internal matter is
being made public
In a strong indictment of Columbia’s
grievance procedures and advising channels, the ad hoc faculty
committee investigating students’ claims that they were
intimidated by some Middle East studies professors described a
pattern of mishandled complaints and widespread confusion over
how to address students’ concerns about what goes on in the
classroom. The committee’s report, obtained by Spectator last
night and expected to be made public today, also identified one
instance in which assistant professor Joseph Massad “exceeded
commonly accepted bounds” when he made an angry outburst to a
student defending Israel’s military conduct. The report
addressed two other specific claims of intimidation, neither of
which it found to constitute abuse. The committee also said it
“found no evidence of any statements made by the faculty that
could reasonably be construed as anti-Semitic,” and it said no
students had received lower grades for holding dissenting
viewpoints. But throughout the 24-page document, a picture
emerges of the Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures
department as rife with tension and incivility, especially in an
increasingly politicized climate after the terrorist attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001. (Continued details are in article)
James Romoser, Committee Report Criticizes Grievance
Procedures, Finds No Anti-Semitism By James Romoser Spectator
Senior Staff Writer, Columbia Spectator, March 31, 2005
---
http://www.columbiaspectator.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/03/31/424bcd5f26faa
Also see
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/31/columbia
The NYT report on this is at
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/01/education/01columbia.html
The report itself is at
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/05/03/ad_hoc_grievance_committee_report.html
Reactions to the Report (this is a particularly long
report featuring criticisms of the make up of the Review
Committee
Reaction to the report was in many ways
predictable. Professors of Middle Eastern studies said that they
had been exonerated (and the professor who was not cleared
attacked the committee). Meanwhile, the harshest criticis of the
professors said that the university had engaged in a whitewash.
Behind the scenes, however, there are signs that some players on
both sides of academe’s Middle East wars may be ready for, if
not peace, at least a cease fire. At Columbia, a new grievance
procedure will be created so that students who feel intimidated
in the future know where to go with their complaints. And the
university is moving quickly on an endowed chair in Israel
studies. And at least some within Middle Eastern studies
nationally say that there may be truth to the idea that too many
programs are dominated by pro-Palestinian scholars. To be sure,
there is still plenty of fighting to be done about the report,
and that started Thursday with the release of the report. The
faculty panel that issued it was created in December with
Columbia facing increasing questions about allegations that
pro-Israel students were being mocked and harassed in some
courses on the Middle East.As the allegations picked up steam, a
group called the David Project released a film called Columbia
Unbecoming, in which students discussed incidents with these
professors.
Scott Jaschik, "War and Peace at Columbia," Inside Higher Ed,
April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/01/columbia
Peace is not patriotic. Peace is
subversive, because peace anticipates a very different world
than the one in which we live--a world where the U.S. would have
no place. The only true heroes are those who find ways that help
defeat the U.S. military. I personally would like to see a
million Mogadishus.
Nicholas De Genova (then
anthropology professor at Columbia University) as quoted by
Ron Howell,
"Radicals Speak Out At Columbia ‘Teach-In,’"
NewsDay, March 27, 2003.
I wonder what type of program
would be more popular if journalism had a certification
examination like some other professions. My guess is that
programs helping most with the certification exams would be very
popular.
Three years ago, Lee C. Bollinger set
off a debate about journalism education, when he suggested that
it focused too much on skills and not enough on the kind of
intellectual growth that would prepare journalists for a long
career. Bollinger, then the new president of Columbia
University, made his comments in rejecting the finalists for the
deanship of the university’s Graduate School of Journalism. Now
— with a new dean running the school — Columbia is introducing a
new journalism curriculum. But it is doing so in a separate
program, maintaining its old program, which has many of the
characteristics Bollinger criticized. The
new program
is a one-year M.A. degree that draws more heavily on the liberal
arts and broad areas of study, rather than the traditional,
one-year M.S. program
at Columbia, which focuses on specific skills like news
writing. Nicholas Lemann, the journalism dean at Columbia, said
in an interview that the two programs are different enough that
he expects many students in the new program to be graduates of
the older program. “We want to teach things [in the new
program] that you cannot pick up on your own on the job. It’s
our supposition that people in this program will never be
full-time at a university again in their jobs, but they will be
in journalism for decades,” he said. “We are trying to teach
people things that will be useful to them over the long term as
journalists.”
Scott Jaschik, "Columbia Rethinks Journalism Education,"
Inside Higher Ed, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/28/journalism
If this was an Islamic state,
this woman would be hanged: Cowards here might bomb her
On March 18, Wadud
rose in
front of a crowd of more than 80 people at an Episcopal church
in Manhattan to conduct a prayer service for men and women. In
the days before the service, she was applauded by some Muslims,
especially in America, for trying to improve the status of women
in the religion. But Muslim religious leaders, particularly in
the Middle East, sharply criticized Wadud for what they
characterized as a break with hundreds of years of Islamic
tradition that precludes women from being imams of congregations
that include men. An art gallery that was scheduled to play host
to the service received a bomb threat, according to
news reports.
Outside the prayer service itself, one protester carried a
placard that said “Mixed-Gender Prayers Today, Hellfire
Tomorrow.” Another said: “If this was an Islamic state, this
woman would be hanged."
Doug Lederman, "Securing the Campus," Inside Higher Ed,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/28/muslim
A case for more nuclear power plants
One of life's more pleasurable experiences is watching
environmentalists paint themselves into a corner. Take energy, for example.
Environmentalists say they support energy independence for America, but their
proposed solutions run from nonsensical to irrational. They say the burning of
fossil fuels causes pollution and global warming. They also are against
developing more domestic energy sources -- witness their hysteria over drilling
in the Arctic Nincompoop Wasteland Refuse -- because each drop of oil prolongs
the age of the internal-combustion engine. But the renewable sources they
promote have serious deficiencies. The technologies behind fuel cells, solar
power and biomass have not advanced sufficiently to supplant gasoline, heating
oil, natural gas and coal anytime soon. Meanwhile, environmentalists are
schizophrenic when it comes to other non-polluting sources. They love wind power
as long as windmills aren't built in places where the wind blows (ridge lines,
mountain passes, Nantucket Sound, etc.). They like hydro, except when it
requires damming rivers. Most of all, however, they hate nuclear power, which
neither fouls the air and water nor emits greenhouse gases. No greener energy
exists, yet environmentalists scream "Three Mile Island" anytime anyone brings
it up. Well, they'd better get used to people bringing it up because nuclear
power is poised for comeback. A conference on nuclear power this month in Paris
closed with most of the 70 participating nations agreeing nuclear power will be
a major player in the 21st century. Interest is especially high in the emerging
economies of Asia, where 18 of the world's 27 new nuclear plants are under
construction. The United States and several European nations may follow.
"Nuclear Revivial," March 29, 2005 ---
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1373041/posts
Students borrowing more than ever before
The report compared borrowing by students who graduated
from college in the 1992-3 and 1999-2000 academic years, and also the financial
status of those starting to repay loans the year after graduation. During the
period between the time the two cohorts in the study graduated, the report
noted, the cost of college rose faster than inflation and Congress moved to
increase the limits on how much students could borrow. Not surprisingly, those
shifts resulted in significant increases in the percentage of graduates who had
borrowed. In 1992-3, 49 percent of graduates had student loans, and the average
debt for those who borrowed was $12,100 (in 1999 constant dollars). In
1999-2000, 66 percent of graduates had student loans and the average debt for
those who borrowed was $19,400. The researchers then looked at the debt burden
that this borrowing placed on the new graduates — a year after graduation. Debt
burden was defined as the monthly loan repayment as a percentage of monthly
income. And despite the significant increase in borrowing, the debt burden
increased only marginally. Using 2001 constant dollars, the researchers found
that the first cohort, a year after graduation was making monthly payments that
averaged $170, or 6.7 percent of their monthly income. The second cohort was
making monthly payments that averaged $210, or 6.9 percent of their monthly
income.
"Borrowing More, Earning More," Inside Higher Ed, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/28/loans
Before traveling for sexual pleasure with
children, know the law in your own country
Wheelchair-bound John Seljan admitted to police he
had been visiting young girls in the Philippines for the last 20 years. The
judge said his term in prison was "tantamount to a life sentence". He is the
first person convicted at trial under the Protect Act, aimed at curbing sex
tourism. The former country singer and businessman was caught at Los Angeles
international airport in 2003, where agents found child pornography, sex aids,
sexually explicit letters to the two girls, aged nine and 12, and 45kg (100lb)
of chocolate in his bags. Some photos portrayed the half-naked elderly man with
naked young girls. Following a non-jury trial in November, he was convicted of
"attempting to travel internationally with the intent of engaging in illegal
sexual conduct with a minor".
"Would-be sex tourist, 87, jailed," BBC News, March 29, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4390199.stm
Does it pay to attend a "luxury college"
vis-a-vis a state-supported college?
Universities and colleges have no magical power. The
value of the education acquired at most middle to upper ranked schools (by any
criteria) is mostly dependent on the commitment and focus of the student rather
than on the miraculous power or luxury characteristics of the institutional
process. Moreover, most colleges and universities sell a commodity product, an
education that at its core is fundamentally similar between institutions. The
amenities may differ — luxury dorms, elaborate student centers, complex and
fully equipped recreational facilities — but the chemistry and English classes
are pretty much the same. Luxury is a good thing if you want it and can afford
it. If someone will deliver a Mercedes for the price of a Geo, why not ride for
the four years in style? Nonetheless, if you find yourself in a Geo, you will
get to the supermarket at almost exactly the same time as your friends in the
Mercedes. What you do when you get out of the car, however, depends almost
entirely on you, not on the luxury of your ride.
John V. Lombardi , "Luxury, Subsidy and Opportunity: Purchasing a Quality
Education, Inside Higher Ed, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/03/28/lombardi
Jensen Comment: I think some criteria were overlooked such as quality of the
living and extra-curricular learning environment. Some students do better
socially and academically on smaller campuses. They become overwhelmed living
in dorms such as the one that is so large that it has two zip codes at the
University of Texas.
What's it like to be on the
faculty of a for-profit higher education system?
From "Is Phoenix the Future?" by Scott Jaschik, Inside
Higher Ed, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/03/28/phoenix
Much of traditional academe doesn’t
know what to make of for-profit higher education. Is it to
be emulated or feared? Gary A. Berg, dean of extended
education at California State University Channel Islands,
studied the sector — and received extensive access to
University of Phoenix administrators and faculty members.
The result is Lessons From the Edge: For-Profit and
Nontraditional Higher Education in America, recently
published
as part of the American Council on Education/Praeger Series
on Higher Education.
The following are Berg’s answers to
some questions about his research and his book:
Q: To prepare for this book, you
taught a course at Phoenix. How did the experience differ
from courses you have taught at more traditional
institutions?
A: It was a vastly
different experience, from beginning to end. First, the
University of Phoenix requires all to participate in a very
lengthy and in-depth training program where candidates are
introduced to the background of the organization and its
teaching-learning model. This is followed by working very
closely under the guidance of a mentor in the first actual
course. The University of Phoenix, much like other open
access institutions such as the British Open University,
relies to a large extent on standardized course materials.
Faculty members are mainly responsible for facilitating
discussions and giving feedback on student work.
Recently, the University of Phoenix
has moved from requiring a faculty-created weekly lecture in
the online courses, to supplying this as well. However, what
a tenured faculty member from a traditional university would
notice most is their lessened influence. University
officials claim that the faculty at the University of
Phoenix is more empowered than part-timers typically found
at traditional institutions. There is some evidence of this.
Certainly, I found that the university regularly asks for
faculty involvement in ongoing training, faculty meetings,
and to provide comment on curricular issues. Additionally,
there are some full-time faculty members who take on
chair-type roles at the University of Phoenix.
Continued in the article
Bob Jensen's documents on education
technology and distance education are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Words from atheism's fundamentalists and
missionaries
He (Larry
Beinhart, who is best known as the author of the novel "Wag the Dog,")
added that he considers
religion "psychotic" and called it "the search for meaning gone mad" in a vast,
indifferent universe, though he acknowledged people spend most of their lives
"figuring out how the world works." Beinhart said he agreed with Karl Marx that
"religion is the opiate of the masses," though he observed that for most people,
its effect is "between opium and prozac, and for a lucky few, it's LSD."
However, the author noted that because religious persons have a world view that
makes sense to them, they "live longer, they're healthier, and everything else
works better. So even if it's delusional, even if it's wrong, it's functional.
And ultimately, we have to think about that and respect that." Beinhart then
stated he believes atheists have become trapped in an argument from the last
century. "Saying there is no God is a dead end," he added. "The concept of God
is offering people something they want. Why do they want it, and what can we
offer in its place?" The writer added that he believes religion can't be
repressed or stamped out. "Just look how many people are in here," he said to
the audience in the room, "and how many people are out there." Noting that
something in religion "makes sense either for the people doing it or for their
relationship to the world or both," Beinhart insisted: "We've got to figure out
what that is and separate it from the delusional parts. We've got to get past
this God stuff."
Randy Hall, "Atheist Activists Look to Future During Easter Convention,"
CNSNews, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=/Culture/archive/200503/CUL20050328a.html
Let the children suffer in the name of Allah
Accusations by Islamic preachers that vaccines are part
of an American anti-Islamic plot are threatening efforts to combat a measles
epidemic that has killed hundreds of Nigerian children, health workers say.
Government officials play down the anti-vaccine sentiment, but all the measles
deaths have been in Nigeria's north, where authorities had to suspend polio
immunizations last year after hard-line clerics fanned similar fears of that
vaccine. Nigeria, whose 130 million people make it Africa's most populous
nation, has recorded 20,859 measles cases so far this year. At least 589 victims
have died, most of them children younger than 5 and all in the north, the
Nigerian Red Cross and the U.N. World Health Organization say. Southern Nigeria,
which is mainly Christian, had only 253 measles cases, and no deaths.
Oloche Samuel, "Muslim clerics warn against vaccinations," HeraldToday, March
28, 2005 ---
http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/news/local/11246628.htm
Come on Texans: Don't be as rough on foreign
murderers as on the domestic murderers
The Supreme Court (search) is considering whether Texas
and other states can execute 51 Mexicans who say they were improperly denied
legal help from their consulates, a dispute testing the effect of international
law in U.S. death penalty cases.
"High Court Considers Death for Foreigners," Fox News, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,151650,00.html
Jensen Comment: This could lead to a whole new strategy by foreign consulates
on how to keep murderers from being executed by refusing to help your own
citizens.
Al-OhOh-ah: Fat teachers tip the scales in
Hawaii
A state lawmaker has suggested Hawaii's public
schoolteachers be forced to weigh in as part of the fight against obesity in
students, KITV in Honolulu reported. State Rep. Rida Cabanilla introduced a
resolution in the house requesting that the Board of Education establish an
obesity database among public schoolteachers. "You cannot keep a kid to a
certain standard that you yourself is not willing to keep," Cabanilla said. It's
been documented that more than 20 percent of Hawaii's children are at risk, or
are already overweight, according to the station. There are no statistics on
teachers. . . . It's been documented that more than 20 percent of Hawaii's
children are at risk, or are already overweight, according to the station. There
are no statistics on teachers. The resolution calls for all public
schoolteachers to weigh in every six months.
"Lawmaker Wants Teachers In Hawaii: Weighed For Obesity Teachers Union
President," NBC5i, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.nbc5i.com/education/4322022/detail.html
As an incentive for weighing in, each teacher
who does so should be given one of the new yummy (to kill for or die from)
Burger King breakfast sandwiches
Burger King began offering two new breakfast sandwiches
Monday, including one that packs more calories and fat than a Whopper. The
Enormous Omelet Sandwich carries 730 calories and 47 grams of fat and comes with
two eggs, sausage, three strips of bacon and two slices of melted American
cheese on a bun. It's heftier than a Whopper hamburger, which weighs in at 700
calories and 42 grams of fat.
"Burger King Sandwich Packs the Calories," My Way News, March 28, 2005
---
http://apnews.myway.com//article/20050328/D8943MJG0.html
Breakfast is more fun at Burger King than at
Harvard: The new cereal options are soggy
There are some things that even a $40,000-a-year Ivy
League education can't buy. At Harvard, it's Frosted Flakes and Lucky Charms.
For Harvard sophomore Allison Kessler, it's annoying to pay more than $4,000 for
a meal plan that scrimps on her favorite breakfast foods. Particularly since,
Kessler, like many college students, eats cereal several times a day. ''I used
to eat Lucky Charms for lunch and dinner," she said. ''The fake stuff gets real
soggy, and I've just stopped eating cereal. This is not fair." Harvard officials
say student surveys showed an interest in healthier, organic products, and
brand-name cereals have been slow to move in that direction. At the same time,
the major cereal companies are raising prices about 8 percent to 10 percent per
year, more than double the rate for natural and lesser-known cereals, according
to Jami M. Snyder, a spokeswoman for Harvard University Dining Services. ''We
have a responsibility to spend their dollars wisely," Snyder said. Harvard has
reduced its six-figure cereal budget by 25 percent this academic year since
shelving most brand-name cereals, including Apple Jacks, Cheerios, and Frosted
Flakes.
Jenn Abelson, "Harvard students want their snap, crackle, pop back," Boston
Globe, March 28, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/HarvardCereal
Moral Hazard: I wonder if he took a page out
of the strategy book for anti-virus protection software companies
The Johannesburg man was picked up after residents told
police they had seen someone fiddling with the lights. Police say he confessed
to working for two tow-truck companies, attempting to generate extra business
for them. In recent months, there have been a number of accidents in the area as
a result of malfunctioning traffic lights. Police spokeswoman Sergeant Katlego
Mogale said the man was arrested on Saturday in the city's western suburb of
Roodepoort and had been seen with two children helping him.
"SA traffic light tamperer stopped," BBC News, April 28, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4387721.stm
Religiongate? Religious faithful are viewed
by the media a being "on the fringe"
Two Washington press corps veterans have conceded that
the news media have a bias against religious believers. On CNN's Reliable
Sources on Sunday, New Republic Senior Editor Michelle Cottle asserted that
journalists "behave as though the people who believe" in widely-held Christian
values "are on the fringe." Steve Roberts, who noted how he "worked for the New
York Times for 25 years," revealed: "I could probably count on one hand, in the
Washington bureau of the New York Times, people who would describe themselves as
people of faith." That disconnect hurt the media, Roberts suggested, in how
"there was so much attention...on the rockers and the sports celebrities who
were registering voters." Roberts asked: "And how many stories did we see about
that compared to the pastors and churches in Ohio who were registering ten times
as many voters?"
Media Research Center ---
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2005/cyb20050328.asp
What you pray for is optional
However, he said he believes he is the latest of
several “black luminaries” to be unjustly accused, including South African
political prisoner-turned-president Nelson Mandela and boxing champions Muhammad
Ali and Jack Johnson. “I just want to say to fans in every corner of the Earth,
every nationality, every race, every language, I love you from the bottom of my
heart,” Jackson said in the hour-long interview. “I would love your prayers and
your goodwill, and please be patient and be with me and believe in me because I
am completely, completely innocent. But please know a lot of conspiracy is going
on.”
John Rogers, "Singer says he's target of ‘a lot of conspiracy'," USA Today,
March 28, 2005, Page 3A ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050328/a_jacksonbox28.art.htm
Jensen Comment: I won't be praying for the parents who allow their kids to
spend the night with Michael.
And I won't be praying for some of the Air
Force Academy top brass
The Air Force has come under sharp criticism for a
top-level memo that clears senior Air Force officers of any responsibility for
the sex-assault scandal at the Air Force Academy. Peter Teets, acting secretary
of the Air Force, sent the memo last week to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
after announcing he would resign, effective Friday. He said he reviewed the
findings of the Defense Department's inspector general and a report of an
independent commission. “I accept the inspector general's findings on which
officers are not responsible for failure to identify and address the academy's
sexual assault problems,” Teets said in the memo. The inspector general's report
singled out officers who are retired, and Teets said taking disciplinary action
against them would be unwarranted.
"Memo clears senior Air Force officers in sex-assault scandal," USA Today,
March 28, 2005, Page 8A ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050328/a_academy28.art.htm
"Revelations of abuse," USA Today, March
28, 2005, Page 18A ---
tidbits050401.htm
•1991:
A Navy officer reported she was sexually assaulted at a
convention of the Tailhook Assn., a Navy and Marine aviators
club. Investigators ultimately found 83 women had been
assaulted and that Navy brass had “tacitly approved” such
behavior for years.
•1996:
Female Army trainees at Aberdeen, Md., reported sexual
assaults. A dozen Army drill instructors were charged and
several officers were reprimanded.
•2003:
Female Air Force Academy cadets said they were sexually
assaulted by male cadets and faced retaliation when they
reported it. An independent panel found that Air Force
leadership had known about sexual misconduct at the academy
since 1993 and failed to address it effectively.
|
|
You get paid to whistle in old DC
But you can't whistle for a fee in NYC
In another scrape with the City Council, Mayor
Bloomberg has just vetoed a bill that would let private citizens profit from
blowing the whistle on fraudulent claims against the city. Called the New York
City False Claims Act, it is modeled on a federal law credited with saving $12
billion since it was updated in 1986. And federal whistleblowers collected more
than $1 billion in bounty-like awards that ranged from 10% to 30% of what the
feds recovered. But Bloomberg vetoed the city version as beyond the power of the
Council to impose without a public referendum.
Frank Lombardi, "Whistleblower bill vetoed," NY Daily News, March 18,
2005 ---
http://www.nydailynews.com/boroughs/story/293982p-251715c.html
China doesn't want the U.K.'s household trash
More than 1,000 tonnes of contaminated household refuse
disguised as waste paper on its way to be recycled in China is to be sent back
to Britain after being intercepted in the Netherlands. Dutch environment
ministry officials believe that British refuse is being systematically dumped in
poor countries via the port of Rotterdam, the largest container port in Europe.
In one of the biggest international scams uncovered in years, they say waste
companies across Europe are colluding to avoid paying escalating landfill and
recycling charges. The foul-smelling rubbish, which includes waste food, plastic
packaging, batteries, drinks cans, old clothes, carrier bags, wood, paper,
broken glass and vegetable matter, has been found in 54 large lorry and
container loads en route to Rotterdam where they were to be trans-shipped to
Asia.
John Vidal, "UK firms caught in illegal waste dumping, The Guardian,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/waste/story/0,12188,1446818,00.html
Shrinkage of R&D investment by the private
sector
The U.S. government’s preoccupation with security
would be less important if the private sector were investing in basic research.
It is not: for years, corporate R&D has stressed return on investment through
the timely creation of new products. And U.S. venture capitalists have responded
to government and corporate demand by disproportionately funding
security-related startups. Since 2000, according to Venture Economics,
communications funding has dropped 83 percent, and software investment is down
77 percent; but during the same period, defense investment fell only 58 percent.
Fields like robotics, nanotechnology, and genomic medicine are underfunded.
Venture capitalists have a “lemminglike instinct when it comes to investment
themes,” admits Bill Kaiser, a general partner at Greylock Partners in Waltham,
MA. The U.S. obsession with security may yet yield wondrous technologies; it has
happened before. “Uncle Sam might be investing in the next Internet,” Nelsen
says. Ken Morse, managing director of the MIT Entrepreneurship Center, insists
that security investment “is a good thing.” After all, he says, “thoughtful
government funding years ago has spawned cool companies.”
Jason Pontin, "United States," MIT's Technology Review, April 2005 ---
http://www2.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/issue/feature_gp_us.asp?trk=nl
Who's side would you take after they gave you
a gun?
“The rebels told me to join them, but I said no. Then
they killed my younger brother. I changed my mind.” It was with this
matter-of-fact description to a Radio Netherlands reporter in 2000 that a
7-year-old boy in Liberia encapsulated the world's largest, but least
understood, case of child abuse.
P.W. Singer, "Tragic challenge of child soldiers," USA Today, March 31,
2005 ---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050331/opcom31.art.htm
Real sporting: 320,000 will die
It was carnage on a scale the frozen ice floes of
Newfoundland have not seen for more than half a century. The cull started early
in the morning, with more than 70 boats disgorging hundreds of seal hunters on
to the ice. By the end of the day more than 15,000 harp seal cubs, most less
than six weeks old, lay dead, clubbed to death and skinned to provide coats,
hats, handbags and other accessories for the European fashion trade.
Paul Brown, "320,000 will die in Canada's biggest seal cull for more than 50
years: Skin trade fuels government's quota increase," The Guardian,
March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/conservation/story/0,13369,1448939,00.html
Japan appears
determined to adopt a new scientific whaling program in the Antarctic that would
kill humpback and fin whales as well as minkes, the Environment Minister, Ian
Campbell, said yesterday. The move would be the first to target bigger whales
since commercial whaling was halted nearly 20 years ago and would be likely to
provoke strong opposition from anti-whaling nations and conservation groups. The
new program was flagged yesterday in a statement by the Japanese Institute of
Cetacean Research that claimed there had been rapid recent growth in humpback
and fin numbers in the Antarctic.
Andrew Darby, "Japanese push to expand whale kill," Sydney Morning Herald,
April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/31/1111862534140.html
Glad I'm not going there
'We would love the tourists to come back,' a Zimbabwean
opposition politician told the Guardian earlier this week. But is it really
possible to holiday in a pariah country without endorsing its government? Stuart
Jeffries examines the ethics of trouble-spot tourism.
"Wish you were here?" The Guardian, March 31, 2005 ---
http://travel.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,7445,1448975,00.html
What the people want is very simple - they want an America as
good as its promise.
Barbara Jordan
I don't want to know what the law is, I want to know who the
judge is.
Roy Cohn
Many college students hope to go to law
school. What is it really like afterwards in terms of job opportunities,
salaries, and life style as a lawyer? I found Gina Rowsam's slightly dated
plenary address to be quite informative. What is quoted below is only a small
part of the summary by Gail Dyer.
Rowsam also discussed trends related to lawyer
dissatisfaction, tenuous job security and increased accountability measures.
Lawyer stress, often associated with pressure to
produce significant billable hours (1800 to 2200
hours per year is a common requirement), is at an all-time high. Citing the
example of the "overnight" demise of some large San Francisco firms, she noted
that new lawyers must be "quick and nimble," rather than relying on an
expectation of job security. In addition, clients are more closely scrutinizing
high compensation awarded to partners and associates. Likewise, the role of
general counsel is drawing scrutiny, as is the role of lawyers in conflict, such
as the "unhealthy partnering" exposed by the Enron and Arthur Andersen scandals
which led to new federal regulations aimed at reigning in unethical and errant
behavior within the corporate power base. How might aspiring lawyers improve
their chances for a satisfying journey and what skills should they sharpen along
the way? Based on NALP's query of law firms across the country, Rowsam reported.
that firms note an overall dearth of new law graduates with the following skills
deemed necessary for success: "smart/savvy (in law and business); adaptable;
flexible; resilient; team player; goal-oriented; strong interpersonal skills;
and leadership capacity." Law firms also reported that increasingly the legal
job market will demand that new graduates and junior associates be scrutinized
with respect to the following capabilities: perform complex work; satisfy high
performance measures; evolve as necessary; focus on the client; fixate on the
bottom line; know about global issues; and apply non-traditional ideas and
concepts. In summary, the opportunities for success and happiness still abound.;
however, prospective. applicants, law students and new lawyers bear the ultimate
responsibility for discovering and navigating their own path.
Gail Dyer, "The Legal Job Market in a Tight Economy," January 13, 2004 ---
http://abacus.bates.edu/career/grad/LAWII/prosp.html
Not surprisingly, graduating
students looking for that first job with a large, nationally-established law
firm maximized their chances of landing that job by graduating near the top
of the class at a top-tier law school; these large firms hired about 10%
(more than 3,000) of nationwide graduates. Of course, 90 percent of new
lawyers were hired despite not graduating in top 10 percent of their class.
Indeed, most graduates-60 percent-joined small or mid-sized firms, and many
of them had substantial or compelling life and/or work experience before
beginning law school.
With respect to types of
jobs and placement trends, most graduates (58.1. percent) chose private
practice. Employment in business was 10.7 percent. Public service jobs,
including military (1.4 percent) and other government jobs (13.1 percent),
judicial clerkships (11.4 percent), public interest (2.9 percent) and
academic positions (1.7 percent), accounted for 31.2 percent taken by
employed graduates. The top states/areas in terms of total reported jobs
taken by law graduates have remained the same in recent
. . .
With respect to starting
salaries (numbers are rounded to the nearest thousand), for all full time
jobs-legal and. other types-the mean and median starting salary was $72,000
and $60,000, respectively. Of course, salaries varied by geographic region:
for example, the mean ranged from $83,000 in the mid atlantic to $51,000 in
the east south central region. In private practice, the mean/median was
$87,000/ $90,000. Generally, level of compensation correlated with the size
of the firm: median salaries ranged from $45,000 in firms of 2-10 attorneys,
to $80,000 in firms of 51-100 attorneys, to $125,000 in firms of more than
251 attorneys. In other areas, mean/median salaries were as follows:
business $69,000/$60,000; academic $47,000/$40,000; government
$44,000/$42,000; judicial clerkship $41.,000/$42,000; and public interest
$38,000/$36,000.
Discontent is rightfully rising over CEO pay
versus performance
In fact, the boss enjoyed a hefty raise last year.
The chief executives at 179 large companies that had filed proxies by last
Tuesday - and had not changed leaders since last year - were paid about $9.84
million, on average, up 12 percent from 2003, according to Pearl Meyer &
Partners, the compensation consultants. Surely, chief executives must have done
something spectacular to justify all that, right? Well, that's not so clear. The
link between rising pay and performance remained muddy - at best. Profits and
stock prices are up, but at many companies they seem to reflect an improving
economy rather than managerial expertise. Regardless, the better numbers set off
sizable incentive payouts for bosses. With investors still smarting from the
bursting of the tech bubble, the swift rebound in executive pay is touching some
nerves. "The disconnect between pay and performance keeps getting worse," said
Christianna Wood, senior investment officer for global equity at Calpers, the
California pension fund. "Investors were really mad when pay did not come down
during the three-year bear market, and we are not happy now, when companies
reward executives when the stock goes up $2."
Claudia H. Deutsch, "My Big Fat C.E.O. Paycheck," The New York Times,
April 3, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/business/yourmoney/03pay.html?
Bob Jensen's threads on corporate fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud.htm
Bob Jensen's updates on fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudUpdates.htm
Seems that every one wants to blast Wal-Mart
except the giant's customers
Led by Wal-Mart's longtime opponents in organized
labor, a new coalition of about 50 groups - including environmentalists,
community organizations, state lawmakers and academics - is planning the first
coordinated assault intended to press the company to change the way it does
business. In the next few months, those critics will speak with one voice in
print advertising, videos and books attacking the company, they say. They also
plan to put forward an association of disenchanted Wal-Mart employees, current
and former, to complain about what they call poverty-level wages and stingy
benefits.
Steven Greenhouse, Opponents of Wal-Mart to Coordinate Efforts," The New York
Times, April 3, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/business/03walmart.html
How close is the A.I.G. fraud of today to the
Enron fraud of yesterday?
There are, however, some disturbing similarities
between A.I.G. and Enron: Asleep-at-the-switch
auditors. Secretive off-balance-sheet entities that
should have been included on the company's financial statements but weren't. A
management team willing to try any number of accounting tricks to make the
company's results appear better than they actually were. And one more likeness:
As A.I.G.'s shares have plummeted, the financial position of one of the
company's
Gretchen Morgenson, "A.I.G.: Whiter Shade of Enron," The New York Times,
March 3, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/business/yourmoney/03gret.html
Bob Jensen's threads on the A.I.G. fraud are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#InvestmentBanking
Working for Wal-Mart may be better than
working for the airlines
Not even close. While roughly 150,000 full- and
part-time jobs have been lost at the network carriers in four years, government
statistics show, low-cost airlines have added fewer than 10,000 workers. Part of
this can be chalked up to post-Sept. 11 cuts, to fewer pilots as old jumbo jets
are scrapped, to fewer flight attendants and to Internet booking and check-in.
But the airlines still need people to fly planes, pass out peanuts and check the
oil. The bottom line: 150,000 people were, basically, replaced by 10,000, and it
often shows.
Robert B. Herring, "The Incredible Disappearing Airline Worker," The New York
Times, April 3, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/business/yourmoney/03count.html
When can your visit your spouse and family
and deduct every day of your visit as a "business expense" including tax
deductions for rent, food, laundry and various other "normal" living expenses?
Actually, our representatives in Congress wrote this part of the tax code to
suit themselves, so a per diem can be deducted even if there are no supporting
receipts.
I begin with the tidbit that inspired Chuck
Pier to respond.
If you live and "work"
in one state, you may have to pay income tax in a state you don't set
foot in during the year
In a case that could have wide implications for the growing practice of
telecommuting, New York's highest court ruled that a man who lives out
of state and works by computer for a New York firm must pay New York
state tax on his full income. The New York Court of Appeals said
computer programmer Thomas Huckaby, who lives in Nashville,
Tenn., owed New York income tax for his full salary, not just the
time he spent working at his employer's New York offices. Mr. Huckaby,
whose home state doesn't have an income tax, paid New York state tax on
about 25% of his income over two years for the time he spent working
there for the National Organization of Industrial Trade Unions. The
court upheld a state tax-department ruling that all his income should be
taxed. That amounts to $4 ,387 plus interest. However, the ruling could
lead to much greater income for the state as it is applied to the
growing field of telecommuting.
"New York Court Puts Tax Bite On Telecommuting,"
The Wall Street Journal,
March 30, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111211594999192054,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Jensen Questions:
Suppose a CPA telecommutes to an office in Manhattan, lives in Nevada,
and telecommutes entirely to her firm's clients in California. Where is
she supposed to pay a state income tax on her full salary?
How can she work it so a per diem for
working on California clients from her home is deductible?
Would it be worthwhile to resign from her
NY firm and simply start outsourcing?
Or would she owe a California income tax
even if she's now telecommuting out of her own firm in Nevada?
Would she be entitled to moving expenses
if she moved closer to her clients but only telecommuted the same as
before she moved? Are the tax rules for moving expenses technologically
obsolete?
April 1, 2005 reply from Chuck Pier
[texcap@HOTMAIL.COM]
This touches on the "tax
home" question and I use it in my individual tax class when we discuss the
deductibility of business travel expenses and the definition of a tax home.
Before getting my PhD I was
a nuclear engineer on submarines in the US Navy. One of the submarines that
I was assigned to was the USS Daniel Boone, which was (it has since been
decommissioned) a ballistic missile submarine (abbreviated SSBN). In order
to keep the missiles at sea for longer periods of time, the SSBNs had two
different crews ("Blue" and "Gold") assigned to them. The "Blue" crew would
take the boat to sea for three months while the "Gold" crew trained and took
leave and vacations, etc. After the "Blue" crew's three month cruise, the
"Gold" crew would take over the sub and the "Blue" crew would have the next
three months to train and take vacations, etc.
Section 162(a)(2) allows for
the deduction of all ordinary and necessary expenses incurred in performing
a trade or business while traveling away from home. The code and various
court cases have defined a taxpayer's "home" for purposes of Sec 162(a)(2)
to generally be the area or vicinity of the person's principle place of
employment. Since my principle place of employment was the submarine, when
the other crew had the boat out at sea, and I was in my home with my family
I was, in the view of the IRS, on a business trip. I was therefore afforded
a deduction of my share of rent, food, laundry and various other "normal"
living expenses. The establishment of a ship as the taxpayer's home for navy
personnel is found in Rev. Rul. 67-438, 1967-2 CB 82. Further in a
subsequent tax case (Griffen TC-Memo 1992-186) the IRS conceded that they
have consistently allowed this so called "Boomer" (the slang name for a
missile submarine for obvious reasons) deduction for the 3 months that the
crew is on shore duty under Rev. Rul. 67-438.
This little story always
hits home with the students and they never forget where a taxpayer's home
(in the eyes of the IRS) is located.
Chuck
Charles A. Pier, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Accounting Walker College of Business
Appalachian State University
Boone, NC 28608 email:
pierca@appstate.edu
Girls Are Closing Gap With Boys
The English record goes against theories that boys are
innately destined to dominate math and science -- a view that caused a firestorm
after recent remarks by Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers. In
discussing the preponderance of men in elite university science and engineering
positions, Mr. Summers said "issues of intrinsic aptitude" might explain why
more males than females score at the highest levels on measures of mathematical
and scientific ability. Elaborating in the ensuing debate over his comments,
however, Mr. Summers said in a letter to the Harvard faculty that his "January
remarks substantially understated the impact of socialization and
discrimination, including implicit attitudes." He added that his remarks about
why more boys than girls score at the extremes on math tests and other
assessments "went beyond what the research has established." The English
experience with math education suggests that gender differences, even those that
seem innate and based in biology, do not lead inevitably to any particular
outcome. That view fits into a broader current sweeping over how scientists
think of genetics. Many now believe that traits that seem intrinsic -- meaning
those grounded in the brain or shaped by a gene -- are subject to cultural and
social forces, and that these forces determine how a biological trait actually
manifests itself in a person's behavior or abilities. An "intrinsic" trait, in
other words, does not mean an inevitable outcome, as many scientists had long
thought. "What's now in play is the question of what it means for a trait to be
innate," says Eric Turkheimer of the University of Virginia. In 2003, a study
led by Prof. Turkheimer found that the influence of genes on intelligence varies
with social class: In well-off children, genes seem to explain most IQ
differences, but in disadvantaged minority children environmental influences
have a greater impact.
Jeanne Whalen, and Sharon Begley, "In England, Girls Are Closing Gap With Boys
in Math: Making Class Interactive Has Side Effect: Females Thrive; Echoes of
Harvard Debate What It Means to Be 'Innate'," The Wall Street Journal,
March 30, 2005; Page A1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111213497906192393,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Censorship in Fort Worth: You must go
elsewhere to see a great IMAX movie
Dean describes an interview with Carol Murray,
director of marketing for the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History: "the
museum decided not to offer the movie (Volcanoes of the Deep) after showing it
to a sample audience, a practice often followed by managers of IMAX theaters.
Ms. Murray said 137 people participated in the survey, and while some thought it
was well done, "some people said it was blasphemous." In their written comments,
she explained, they made statements like "I really hate it when the theory of
evolution is presented as fact," or "I don’t agree with their presentation of
human existence." Apparently, the decision to show or not to show an IMAX film
is a marketing-driven decision based upon anti-evolutionary reactions rather on
whether the films portray valid scientific principles, discoveries, and
explorations.
Edna Devore, "Censoring Science: IMAX and Evolution," Live Science,
March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.space.com/searchforlife/seti_censorship_050331.html
Added April 5, 2005: Barbara Scofield informed
that this censorship was reversed after all the bad publicity ---
http://www.fwmuseum.org/omni.html
Sounds like a win, win strategy
Investing in socially responsible companies delivers
better returns over the long term, a new study claims. Fund manager AMP Capital
Investors tested whether putting money into such companies gave attractive
returns for investors, by focusing on Australia's top 300 listed companies over
10 years. It found that more responsible companies outperformed by 4.8 per cent
over four years and 3 per cent over 10 years. AMP Capital Investors' head of
sustainable funds, Michael Anderson, said the research, like international
studies, supported claims that socially responsible criteria could help identify
corporate performers.
Leon Gettler, "Study shows ethics deliver," Sydney Morning Herald, March 31,
2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/03/30/1111862462471.html
That's a princely sum being questioned by
auditors
The Treasury will next week curb a so-called creative
accounting fiddle which has allowed Prince Charles to receive up to Ł1.2m in
"back door" payments from the Duchy of Cornwall estate to cover his personal
expenses, according to documents obtained by the Guardian. The new agreement,
which comes into force two days before the prince marries Camilla Parker Bowles
on Friday week, will halve the money he can borrow from the estate's capital
funds in the next two years. The prince is entitled to the revenue from the
Duchy of Cornwall - currently nearly Ł12m a year - but is not supposed to touch
the capital. But under a 1982 act of parliament, the capital account was allowed
to lend the revenue account an additional Ł1.4m - allowing the prince access to
extra cash. Under the new deal the amount he can borrow from the Duchy will be
cut from Ł1.2m to Ł950,000 next Wednesday, falling to Ł750,000 in April next
year and to Ł600,000 in April 2007. Further moves could see it abolished
altogether.
David Hencke, "Treasury curbs prince's accounting 'fiddle' ," The Guardian,
March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.guardian.co.uk/monarchy/story/0,2763,1447929,00.html
The New Enrons
But as the markets and the bankruptcy criminal courts
sorted out the Enron mess, Wall Street firms began to reconstruct the strategy
at which Enron and others failed. They hired many of the good, non-crooked
traders who were cut loose en masse in 2001, and they snapped up utility assets
on the cheap.
This list of power plants bought and sold in 2003 and 2004
shows Goldman, Bear Stearns, and private equity firms have helped distressed
power companies downsize. In October 2003, Goldman
bought all of
Cogentrix, a company that
owns several electricity generating facilities. Last September, it
paid $656 million to
buy stakes in 12 power plants and a natural gas pipeline from bankrupt
National Energy & Gas Transmission. This week's purchase of the
wind-energy company is simply the latest step.
Daniel Gross, "The New Enrons: And we mean that in a good way," Slate,
March 23, 2005 ---
http://www.slate.com/id/2115217/
Race and Medicine
The
problem, say critics of BiDil, is that while genetic patterns are related to a
population’s shared ancestries and geographic histories, what are conventionally
called races are socially constructed categories that have little basis in
biology or genetics. Marketing BiDil only to black patients “is a bad idea,”
says Charles Rotimi, an epidemiologist and acting director of the National Human
Genome Center at Howard University in Washington, DC. The problem, he says, “is
in using a social label that we know is not directly related to genetics” to
categorize responses to a drug. That practice, says Rotimi, ignores the
complexities and subtleties of population genomics, conflating genetics and
race. Making the debate over BiDil even more contentious is the convincing
evidence that the drug is, for many heart failure patients, a lifesaver. Of the
five million Americans suffering from heart failure, about 725,000 are African
American. And there is evidence that, as a group, African Americans tend not to
respond as well to some conventional heart failure drugs, such as
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. By nearly all accounts, BiDil
could help a significant portion of these African-American patients.
David Rotman, "Race and Medicine," MIT's Technology Review, March 31,
2005 ---
http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/05/04/issue/feature_medicine.asp?trk=nl
A poem begins in
delight and ends in wisdom.
Robert Frost. as quoted by Mark Shapiro at
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-03-31-05.htm
The Princeton Review ranks George Mason
University Number 1 in the United States in terms of having a "diverse" student
population ---
http://www.princetonreview.com/college/research/rankings/rankingDetails.asp?categoryID=3&topicID=20
Why then did George Mason try to rescind a
$35,000 Michael Moore speaking invitation?
A short time ago I read with no small amusement about
the plight of George Mason University. It seems that somebody in the
administration had signed a contract with Michael Moore, the man who has made
"controversy" his middle name. On Mr. Moore's side of the deal, he was to appear
on campus and give a lecture; on George Mason University's side, they were to
hand him a $35,000 check before he hopped into his stretch limo and roared off.
The rub came when the president, who had been on a trip to China, returned to
the campus, found out about the Moore invitation, and tried his best to rescind
the contract. His reason was simple enough: George Mason just couldn't afford
it.
Sanford Pinsker, "I Know How Much it Costs to Hear the Caged Bird Sing," The
Irascible Professor, March 31, 2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-03-31-05.htm
Jensen Comment: This article has more to say about colleges paying absurd fees
for speakers than it does about the cancellation of Michael Moore's speech at
George Mason University. Actually that cancellation had more to do with
politics than not being able to afford $35,000 on a one time basis. What was at
stake was future funding of the entire university ---
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/10/01/entertainment/main646871.shtml
The latest huge Enron-type scandal: Where
was the external auditor, PwC, when all this was going on?
Among AIG's admissions: It used insurers in Bermuda and
Barbados that were secretly under its control to bolster its financial results,
including shifting some liabilities off its books. Amid the wave of financial
scandals that have toppled corporate executives in recent years, AIG's woes
stand out. Unlike Enron, WorldCom and HealthSouth -- all highfliers that rose to
prominence in the 1990s -- AIG has been a solid blue-chip for decades. Its stock
is in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and its longtime chief, Maurice R.
"Hank" Greenberg, was a globe-trotting icon of American business. Civil and
criminal probes already have forced the departure of the 79-year-old Mr.
Greenberg after nearly four decades at AIG's helm. Investigators are closely
examining the actions of Mr. Greenberg and several other top AIG officials who
have quit or been ousted in recent days, including its former chief financial
officer; the architect of its offshore operations in Bermuda; and its
reinsurance operations chief. In addition, the Securities and Exchange
Commission could eventually bring civil-fraud charges against the company or
executives.
Ian McDonald, Theo Francis, and Deborah Solomon, "AIG Admits 'Improper'
Accounting : Broad Range of Problems Could Cut $1.77 Billion Of Insurer's Net
Worth A Widening Criminal Probe," The Wall Street Journal, March 31,
2005; Page A1---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111218569681893050,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Underwriting losses: AIG
said it improperly characterized losses on insurance policies -- known as
underwriting losses -- as another type of loss, through a series of
transactions with Capco Reinsurance Co. of Barbados. It said Capco should
have been treated as a subsidiary of AIG, a change that will force AIG to
restate $200 million of the other losses as underwriting losses from its
auto-warranty business. AIG long has prided itself on having among the
lowest underwriting losses in the industry -- a closely watched figure.
• Investment income: Through
a string of transactions with unnamed outside companies, AIG said it booked
a total of $300 million in gains on its bond portfolio from 2001 through
2003 without actually selling the bonds. If it had waited to book the income
until it sold the bonds, the income would have come later and been counted
as "realized capital gains." That category of income is sometimes treated
suspiciously by investors because insurance companies have considerable
discretion over when they sell securities in their portfolio.
• Bad debts: The company
suggested that money owed to AIG by other companies for property-casualty
insurance policies might not be collectible. The company said that could
result in an after-tax charge of $300 million.
• Commission costs:
Potential problems with AIG's accounting for the up-front commissions it
pays to insurance agents and similar items might force it to take an
after-tax charge of up to $370 million, the company said.
• Compensation costs: AIG
also will begin recording an expense on its books for compensation paid to
its employees by Starr International, the private company run by current and
former executives. Starr has spent tens of millions of dollars on a
deferred-compensation program for a hand-picked group of AIG employees in
recent years.
The probe that spurred the
AIG admissions stemmed from a broader investigation of "nontraditional
insurance," an industry niche that had grown rapidly in the 1990s. In
particular, regulators have been concerned about a product called
"finite-risk reinsurance."
Reinsurance is a decades-old
business that sells insurance to insurance companies to cover
bigger-than-expected claims, thereby spreading the losses for policies they
sell to individuals and companies. Finite-risk reinsurance blends elements
of insurance and loans.
Regulators had become
concerned that some insurers were using the policies to improperly bolster
their financial results. Their concern: For a contract to count as
insurance, it has to transfer risk to the insurer selling the policy. Some
finite-risk policies appeared to be more akin to loans than insurance
policies -- yet the buyers used favorable insurance accounting.
In December, the SEC opened
a broad probe into at least 12 insurance and reinsurance companies,
including General Re, ACE Ltd., Chubb Corp. and Swiss Reinsurance Co. All
four companies have said they are cooperating with the inquiry.
Key to the inquiry is how
the finite-risk transactions were structured and treated on the financial
statements of the companies or their clients, these people said. Following
the SEC request for information, General Re lawyers combed through their
finite-risk insurance deals and turned up roughly a dozen transactions where
it wasn't clear that enough risk had been transferred to treat them as
insurance. Among those deals was the AIG deal. General Re lawyers quickly
alerted the SEC and the New York attorney general's office, which resulted
in the current probe.
The catalogue of problems
AIG unveiled yesterday was detailed to law-enforcement and regulatory
authorities in meetings with the company's outside lawyers in recent days.
The company also has fired three senior executives for refusing to cooperate
with investigators, including former chief financial officer Howard I. Smith
and Michael Murphy, a Bermuda-based AIG executive.
Given its level of
cooperation so far, the company almost certainly will be able to reach a
civil settlement with authorities, people familiar with the probes said. One
of these people compared AIG's cooperation to the approach taken by Michael
Cherkasky, the chief executive of Marsh & McLennan Cos. After Mr. Spitzer
accused Marsh's insurance brokerage of bid-rigging, its board forced out
then-CEO Jeffrey Greenberg, Mr. Greenberg's son and a former AIG executive.
Mr. Cherkasky, the head of Marsh's investigative unit, became the new chief.
When he came in, a criminal
indictment of the company remained a possibility. But Mr. Cherkasky cleaned
house among the company's high ranks, then made sure the firm's internal
investigation and cooperation with regulators were the top priority. He
often personally participated in talks with regulators.
Bob Jensen's threads on insurance company
scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
Bob Jensen's threads on PwC woes are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraud001.htm#PwC
Blowing the whistle on the top whistle blower
cop
Some government workers want to blow the whistle on the
U.S. Office of Special Counsel -- the agency that is supposed to protect federal
whistle-blowers. The independent agency, created by Congress in the wake of the
Watergate scandal, is charged with protecting federal employees and deciding
whether their complaints merit full-scale investigation -- a first line of
defense against fraud and mismanagement in government. But current and former
staffers as well as lawyers who practice before the agency say it is in turmoil
following a series of actions by its chief, Special Counsel Scott Bloch.
John R. Wilke, "Crying Foul at Whistle-Blower Protector: Some Staff From U.S.
Office of Special Counsel Claim Wrongdoing by the Agency's Chief ," The Wall
Street Journal, March 31, 2005; Page A4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111222969400193774,00.html?mod=todays_us_page_one
Bob Jensen's threads on whistle blowing are
at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudConclusion.htm#WhistleBlowing
If you are leaving the U.S. this summer, you
should know about this new credit card fee in addition to the base 3% fee you
probably are paying now. You might check to see if each purchase is costing you
an added 6.5%
After Saturday, however, Visa USA Inc. plans to levy
instead a 1% fee on every charge that's made outside the cardholder's home
country, even on those where customers have paid in their native currency.
MasterCard International Inc., so far, isn't matching Visa's fee increase. Banks
that issue Visa cards have a choice as to whether to pass the increase along to
customers. MBNA Corp., Merrill Lynch & Co., HSBC Holdings PLC's HSBC Bank USA
and Capital One Financial Corp., among others, will be making customers pay fees
when charging in U.S. dollars while abroad. The banks that aren't passing the
fee along include Citigroup Inc.'s Citibank and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. In cases
where issuers are passing along Visa's expanded fee, consumers could get hit
with multiple fees for the same transaction abroad. A first fee comes from
merchants, since those that let people charge in dollars often levy their own
conversion fee. Their fee typically ranges from 2% to 3.5%, according to David
Robertson, publisher of the Nilson Report, a trade newsletter. Then, once they
get the bill, cardholders might see fees from Visa or MasterCard coupled with
those from their issuing bank. All together,
these fees could equal 6.5% of the purchase.
Jennifer Saranow, "More Credit-Card Fees Loom Abroad : Visa to Lead
Move to Raise Currency-Conversion Levies On Purchases Outside U.S.," The Wall
Street Journal, March 31, 2005; Page D2 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111223526282193919,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Bob Jensen's threads on "Dirty Secrets of Credit Card Companies" are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#FICO
Fired White Workers Are Awarded $1.9 Million
A federal jury said Wednesday that Orleans Parish
District Attorney Eddie Jordan, the first African-American to be elected the
city's chief prosecutor, discriminated against 43 white employees when he fired
them in 2003. Jurors awarded the plaintiffs about $1.9 million in back pay and
other damages, a figure equal to about 20 percent of Jordan's annual budget of
$10 million. Jordan said his office could not afford such a payment and that he
would appeal the verdict.
Gwen Filosa, "Fired White Workers Are Awarded $1.9 Million: Jury finds DA
liable in discrimination suit," The Times-Picayune, March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/frontpage/index.ssf?/base/news-3/111225255336540.xml
CEOs live in a world of gold: A golden hello
on the way in and a golden parachute on the way out (even in failure)
Mark V. Hurd, who takes over tomorrow as chief
executive of troubled computer and printer maker Hewlett-Packard Co., is widely
viewed as the antithesis of the celebrity chief executive, a nuts-and-bolts
manager with little interest in grabbing headlines for himself. But judging by
his new employment agreement, HP's board appears to view Hurd as a superstar at
least on par with the firm's formerly highflying chief executive, Carly Fiorina.
The board forced Fiorina out in February for not fixing the company as quickly
as it wanted.
Ben White, "HP Giving Hurd $20 Million 'Golden Hello'," Washington Post,
March 31, 2005, Page E01 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14484-2005Mar30.html?referrer=email
Leader with Unique Political Caliber
A booklet "Leader with Unique Political Caliber" was
published by the Group of Dialectical Materialists of Italy on the occasion of
the 12th anniversary of the election of leader Kim Jong Il as chairman of the
DPRK National Defence Commission. The booklet praised Kim Jong Il as the great
leader who created a peculiar political mode with his unique political
philosophy. His political philosophy is the Juche philosophy and his politics
enjoys absolute support and trust from all the Korean people, it noted, and
continued: His Songun politics occupies a distinguished place in his political
mode. Under his wise leadership the DPRK has become a political power which
stands undeterred by any political turmoil in the world. Kim Jong Il has rare
organizing capability, indefatigable practical ability and distinguished
creative ingenuity. The booklet referred in detail to the fact that he has
consolidated the single-minded unity of the whole society and wisely led the
building of a great prosperous powerful socialist nation. It concluded that the
army and the people of the DPRK led by Kim Jong Il possessed of unique political
caliber will always emerge victorious.
"Booklet Praising Kim Jong Il Published in Italy," North Korean News,
March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.kcna.co.jp/item/2005/200503/news03/31.htm#3
Could DNA information be used against us?
Yes. We don’t have adequate protections right now for
DNA testing. If you took a DNA test, and it showed you should go on an
anti-breast-cancer drug right now, right away your disability insurance and
maybe your job could be imperiled because it will become known through your
medical records that you have a higher-than-average risk of getting a genetic
disease like breast cancer. You might find it hard to change your job. If
someone did a genetic test on your child and showed they were at high risk of
getting diabetes or depression, maybe they wouldn’t hire you because they
wouldn’t want the high cost of covering your family. The laws aren’t in place
yet.
Karen Springen, "Personalized Health," Newsweek, March 29, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7327285/site/newsweek/
Executive order requiring drugstores to fill
prescriptions for contraceptives
Responding to complaints about a Chicago pharmacist who
refused to dispense birth control pills, Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich on Friday
issued an executive order requiring drugstores to fill prescriptions for
contraceptives. The policy, the first of its kind in the U.S., requires
pharmacies that carry contraceptives to fill prescriptions without delay. "No
hassles, no lecture, just fill the prescription," Blagojevich said. If an
individual pharmacist will not provide birth control pills because of moral or
religious beliefs, the drugstore must have a plan to ensure that the patient
receives the pills promptly.
Stepenie Simon, "Illinois Drugstores Required to Fill Birth Control
Prescriptions," LA Times, April 2, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/LAtimesApril2
Yawn: Watch for Dan near the bull ring at
the rodeo: He's looking for proof he should've had in the first place. If he
succeeds, he might actually prevent George W. Bush from being re-elected in 2008
Dan Rather, making his first TV appearance since
leaving the CBS Evening News, said on the April first edition of 60
Minutes/Wednesday, “Finally, a personal note. Partisan political operatives
drove me from my rightful place as anchor of the CBS Evening News, alleging,
without proof, that our story on President Bush’s evasion of his National Guard
service was somehow based on quote, ‘fraudulent,’ unquote, memos. Following in
the footsteps of O.J. Simpson, I am committing to you here tonight that I will
go to any rodeo, to any part of the Earth, to track down proof of the
authenticity of the memos. No matter what you’ve heard from fanatics on the
right, I still stand by the accuracy of the story.”
Liberal Lunacy, April 2, 2005 ---
http://www.liberallunacy.net/
An interesting news bite
A MARSUPIAL lion that roamed Australia during the
Ice Age had the most powerful bite of any known animal in the world, living or
extinct, an Australian and Canadian research team has discovered. More closely
related to a wombat than an African lion, the 100 kilo marsupial lion known as
Thylacoleo carnifex could out bite the sabre-toothed tiger, the bone-cracking
spotted hyena and the Tasmanian Devil.
"Aussie lion beats all in bite test," News.com, April 2, 2005 ---
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,12729760-29277,00.html
One has to wonder if his original support to
make her a senator was just to get her out of Texas. Or is it that he just has
friends already in high places in Austin?
Entrepreneur Clayton Williams, who spent millions
of his personal fortune in an unsuccessful 1990 bid for governor of Texas, has
vowed to stop Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison if she runs, as expected, against Gov.
Rick Perry next year. Williams has told friends he supported Hutchison only for
the Senate, not to be governor.
The New Republic, April 2, 2005 ---
http://tnr.com/
Some compartments have their own wading pools
A California woman and her son have sued cruise
operator Holland America Line for unspecified damages after getting sick on a
cruise where they said toilets overflowed and crew members were seen with
prostitutes at ports of call. Bernice Oltman, 81, and her son, Jack Oltman,
whose age was not given, said they took a trip on Holland America Line's cruise
ship Amsterdam from Valparaiso, Chile to San Diego, California, in March 2004,
where they said they encountered unprofessional staff and unsanitary conditions.
"Not long into the cruise, the toilets on lower decks overflowed several times,"
the Oltmans said in their lawsuit, filed in King County District Court in
Washington state on Wednesday. The Oltmans, who paid $4,642.06 for the cruise,
said it took crew members 15 hours to clean up the mess, which "created
incredibly unsanitary conditions on board, separate and apart from a piercing
stench."
"Cruise Line Sued for 'Unsanitary' Cruise," Reuters, April 1, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/WadingApril1
Is Moore's Law dead after forty years?
No, though various analysts and executives have
incorrectly predicted its demise. It will, however, likely begin to slow down to
a three-year cycle in the next decade and require companies to adopt alternative
technologies. Some people, such as Stan Williams and Phil Kuekes of HP Labs, say
the ability to shrink transistors will start to become problematic by around
2010. That should prompt manufacturers to adopt alternatives, such as HP's
crossbar switches, to control electrical signals. Others, such as Intel's
director of technology strategy, Paolo Gargini, paint a more gradual picture.
Around 2015, they say, manufacturers will start to move toward hybrid chips,
which combine elements of traditional transistors with newfangled technology
such as nanowires. A full conversion to new types of chips may not occur until
the 2020s. From a theoretical point of view, silicon transistors could continue
to be shrunk until about the 4-nanometer manufacturing generation, which could
appear about 2023. At that point, the source and the drain, which are separated
by the transistor gate and gate oxide, will be so close
Michael Kanellos, "FAQ: Forty years of Moore's LawBy , ZDNet News: April
1, 2005 ---
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9584_22-5647824.html
Clarence Darrow Quotations
---
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/c/clarence_darrow.html
As long
as the world shall last there will be wrongs, and if no man objected and no
man rebelled, those wrongs would last forever.
Chase after the truth like all hell and you'll free
yourself, even though you never touch its coat tails.
Even if you do learn to speak correct English, whom are
you going to speak it to?
History repeats itself. That's one of the things wrong
with history.
I am a friend of the working man, and I would rather be
his friend, than be one.
I am an agnostic; I do not pretend to know what many
ignorant men are sure of.
I do not consider it an insult, but rather a compliment
to be called an agnostic. I do not pretend to know where many ignorant men
are sure - that is all that agnosticism means.
I do not pretend to know where many ignorant men are sure
- that is all that agnosticism means.
I don't like spinach, and I'm glad I don't, because if I
liked it I'd eat it, and I just hate it.
I have suffered from being misunderstood, but I would
have suffered a hell of a lot more if I had been understood.
I never wanted to see anybody die, but there are a few
obituary notices I have read with pleasure.
If a man is happy in America, it is considered he is
doing something wrong.
If you lose the power to laugh, you lose the power to
think.
Just think of the tragedy of teaching children not to
doubt.
No other offense has ever been visited with such severe
penalties as seeking to help the oppressed.
Someday I hope to write a book where the royalties will
pay for the copies I give away.
The first half of our lives are ruined by our parents and
the second half by our children.
The pursuit of truth will set you free; even if you never
catch up with it.
The trouble with law is lawyers.
There is no such thing as justice - in or out of court.
To think is to differ.
True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than
anywhere else.
When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become
President; I'm beginning to believe it.
With all their faults, trade unions have done more for
humanity than any other organization of men that ever existed. They have
done more for decency, for honesty, for education, for the betterment of the
race, for the developing of character in man, than any other association of
men.
You can only be free if I am free.
You can only protect your liberties in this world by
protecting the other man's freedom.
Even Jensen did not get not get
fooled by these Brown University April 1 jokesters making fun of the remarks of
Larry Summers.. This is funny The Brown Daily Herald on April 1, 2005
at
http://snipurl.com/BrownApril1
France declares war on the United States
France declared war on the United States three weeks
ago. You didn't notice? Clearly, you're not French. This war is being fought
against one of America's greatest exports. Not rock 'n roll. Not McDonald's or
the Disney Co. This time it's Google that the French have in their
crosshairs.
Jean-Noel
Jeanneney, president of France's
Bibliotheque National,
or National Library, declared last month that
Google's project
to create a searchable online database of the world's books constitutes the
sunrise of an American hegemony over information and literature.
Jeanneney's call to arms rattled French President
Jacques Chirac's
saber. Along with French Culture Minister
Renaud
Donnedieu de Vabres, announced on March 17 that
France would study ways for the European community to embark on a similar
project so as to counter Google's thrust into the heartland of Euro-culture.
Robert MacMillan, "La France Contre Google," The Washington Post, April
5, 2005 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A27282-2005Apr5.html?referrer=email
All this for free: Google's free service
will be able to store two gigabytes of e-mail messages
Google Inc., the Internet search engine company, is
doubling the amount of storage offered on its e-mail service and plans to remove
limits on message capacity as it competes for users with Yahoo Inc. Users of
Google's service will be able to store two gigabytes of e-mail messages, double
the storage previously offered, the director of the company's e-mail group,
Georges Harik, said. One gigabyte, or 1,024 megabytes, is roughly equivalent to
the content in 32 feet of shelves filled with books.
Bloomberg News, "Google Doubling Storage on Free E-Mail Service,"
The New York Times, April 2, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/02/technology/02google.html
Yet another reason to have a big IRA
The ruling offers a new layer of federal protection for IRA assets, which could
make transfers and contributions to IRAs more attractive. That could be good
news for many people with creditor concerns -- such as doctors, business
executives and other professionals -- who feared moving their assets into IRAs
after changing jobs or opening their own business.
Christopher Conkey and Rachel Emma Silverman, "High Court Rules IRAs
Untouchable: Unanimous Decision Means Retirement Savings Are Protected From
Creditors," The Wall Street Journal, April 5, 2005, Pag D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111262374010897093,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
The Max Planck
Institute for the Study of Societies is an institute for advanced research in
the social sciences. It builds a bridge between theory and policy by conducting
basic research on the self-organization and governance of modern societies
---
http://www.mpi-fg-koeln.mpg.de/index_en.html
Reports sometimes are only printed in German, but at other times there are
English translations.
Especially note the discussion papers at
http://www.mpi-fg-koeln.mpg.de/pu/discpapers_en.html
Path dependence as a
concept in institutional theories has become increasingly popular in economics
and other social sciences. The key idea is that in a sequence of events, the
latter events are not (completely) independent from those that occurred in the
past. Yet, common usage of the concept often subsumes two markedly different
models and approaches to understand historical sequencing. The two main
processes of the past shaping the future – diffusion and developmental pathways
– must be distinguished analytically. This paper juxtaposes (1) the unplanned
"trodden path" that takes shape through the subsequent repeated use by other
individuals of that spontaneously chosen path, and (2) the "branching pathways"
or juncture at which one of the available alternative pathways must be chosen in
order to continue a journey. Furthermore, the typical approaches and their
explanatory purchase are discussed in reference to explanations of institutional
change. The paper shows that the first path dependence theorem is too
deterministic and inflexible, whereas the second approach is sufficiently supple
to analyze various forms of institutional change.
Bernhard Ebbinghaus, "Two Approaches Applied to Welfare State Reform" ---
http://www.mpi-fg-koeln.mpg.de/pu/abstracts/dp05-2.html
From one of the leading law school advocates
of open sharing
Many of Eben Moglen's papers on patents and copyrights can be downloaded from
http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/
My good friend John Howland, a professor of
computer science, recommends these particular papers for starters:
Professor Moglen runs a blog called "Freedom
Now" at
http://emoglen.law.columbia.edu/blog
Entries are relatively infrequent and date back to April 2000
There are also a few links to audio and video presentations.
Bob Jensen's threads on OKI ,DSpace, and
SAKAI: Free sharing of courseware from MIT, Stanford, and other colleges and
universities ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/updateee.htm#OKI
Bob Jensen's thread son copyright law and the
evil DMCA are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm#Copyright
"Other" Postmodernists
Mary Ann Dellinger is an associate professor of Spanish at Virginia Military
Institute by choice. She wears a uniform to class, responds to “Ma’am", and has
been complimented on her crisp salute by several members of the VMI Corps of
Cadets. The Postmodernists featured in this piece are real.
Mary Ann Dellinger," On Being the ‘Other’," Inside Higher Ed,
March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/03/31/dellinger
Taxation disparity between treaty-country
versus non-treaty-country foreign students
What I find troublesome is the disparate treatment of
treaty-country students with non-treaty-country students. For example, a Chinese
F-1 student can exclude all scholarship income and $5,000 TA/RA compensation. A
non-treaty country student has to follow US law on scholarship income, which
means any student-athletes getting room and board in the scholarship has to pay
tax (only the personal exemption can be claimed; no standard deduction). Even
worse is the payroll group at universities sometimes doesn't have the necessary
checks and balances to ensure that the student has sufficient withholding. The
foreign students don't know how to complete the W-4, and some check MFJ, when
there is no such thing as a joint NRA return. Last night, one poor student owed
$500+ on the federal return and another $500+ on the Connecticut return. The W-2
had almost no federal or state withholding. That student was in shock!
[Amy.Dunbar@BUSINESS.UCONN.EDU},
April 1, 2005
"Seven grain" is not the same as "whole
grain."
Most popular breads are made with some type of wheat
flour. But a wheat kernel has three layers -- the fiber-rich bran outer layer;
the endosperm middle layer; and the wheat germ, the nutrient-dense embryo. The
most healthful breads use the whole kernel -- thus the name "whole-grain
breads." But bread makers often strip away the bran and the germ, which allows
them to make soft, airy breads with a longer shelf life. Although extra vitamins
and minerals are added to replace the lost nutrients, this "enriched" flour
isn't a replacement for the lost fiber.
Tara Parker-Pope, "Health Mail Box," The Wall Street Journal, April 5,
2005, Page D4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111266192479797889,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Question
Why should teaching a course online take "twice as much time" as teaching it
onsite?
Answer
Introduction to Economics: Experiences of teaching this course online versus
onsite
With a growing number of courses offered online and
degrees offered through the Internet, there is a considerable interest in online
education, particularly as it relates to the quality of online instruction. The
major concerns are centering on the following questions: What will be the new
role for instructors in online education? How will students' learning outcomes
be assured and improved in online learning environment? How will effective
communication and interaction be established with students in the absence of
face-to-face instruction? How will instructors motivate students to learn in the
online learning environment? This paper will examine new challenges and barriers
for online instructors, highlight major themes prevalent in the literature
related to “quality control or assurance” in online education, and provide
practical strategies for instructors to design and deliver effective online
instruction. Recommendations will be made on how to prepare instructors for
quality online instruction.
Yi Yang and Linda F. Cornelious, "Preparing Instructors for Quality
Online Instruction, Working Paper ---
http://www.westga.edu/%7Edistance/ojdla/spring81/yang81.htm
Jensen Comment: The bottom line is that
teaching the course online took twice as much time because "largely from
increased student contact and individualized instruction and not from the use of
technology per se." Online teaching is more likely to result in instructor
burnout. These and other issues are discussed in my "dark side" paper at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/theworry.htm
Bob Jensen's threads on the positive side are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/assess.htm
Bob Jensen's documents on education technology
are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/000aaa/0000start.htm
Note: A number of
interesting replies to the above quotation (that I circulated on the AECM) will
be posted in my forthcoming April 15 edition of New Bookmarks.
NYSE Monopoly Power: Hard to teach an old
man new tricks
The Republican Mr. Donaldson [will] to join the two
Democratic commissioners on the Securities and Exchange Commission to alter the
national stock market system. (The other two Republicans will vote no.) By
voting to not only perpetuate the outmoded "trade-through" rule but extend it
further, Mr. Donaldson will be handing a plum to his old employers at the Big
Board who want to protect their "specialist" trading system. Along the way he'll
be saddling the nation's investors with less efficiency and competition. The
irony here is that this entire exercise began as an SEC effort to modernize the
national market system, the regulation of which has changed little since the
1970s. Leading the to-do list was reform of the trade-through rule, which was
introduced in 1975 and dictates that traders must do business with whatever
exchange shows the "best" price for a stock. That rule might have made sense
back in the days of slow and regional markets. But with today's technology
allowing for instant trading, the rule has become a roadblock to the very
efficiency and competition it was designed to foster.
"Donaldson's Dinosaur," The Wall Street Journal, April 4, 2005; Page A14
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111257230421296673,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Donaldson's defense of his decision ---
http://accounting.smartpros.com/x47641.xml
More and more poor families have
access to free (no loans) higher education in top public
universities
The University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill set off something of a movement in October 2003 when
it announced changes in its aid policies that would guarantee
low-income students enough grant money that they could have
their full costs covered – without borrowing. While the most
prestigious private institutions in the country (which also
happen to be the wealthiest) have been improving their aid
programs dramatically in recent years, Chapel Hill — by creating
a program for those with family incomes up to 150 percent of the
poverty level — started things moving for public universities.
Since Chapel Hill announced its shift, similar programs or other
major aid efforts have been announced by the Universities of
Virginia, Michigan, Maryland and Nebraska, among others.
Scott Jaschik, "A Covenant With Students," Inside Higher Ed,
April 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/05/covenant
"Once a jolly swag man camped beside a
billabons . . . ": Australian sacrifices in our troubled times
Nine brave Australian soldiers have given their lives to
the noble cause of helping our neighbours in a time of need. The entire nation
mourns this grievous loss – which comes on top of the death of Private Jamie
Clark last month in the Solomon Islands – and opens its heart to the families of
the outstanding men and women killed in Saturday's helicopter accident. But
their deaths are not in vain and tell an incredible story about our developing
role within the region where we live. Laying up in Singapore after its relief
work in tsunami-shattered Aceh, until Monday...
The Australian, April 4, 2005
Mossberg on how to organize your digital
photographs
Two of the best photo organizers have just been
updated, and I have been testing them on my collection of more than 10,000
digital photos. One is Picasa 2, which runs only on Windows and is now a free
offering from Google, which purchased Picasa last year. The other is Apple
Computer's iPhoto 5, which runs only on the Macintosh. It comes free on every
new Mac. Existing Mac owners can buy it as part of the excellent $79 iLife
suite, which also includes programs for organizing and editing music and videos,
and for authoring DVDs.
Walter S. Mossberg, "The Best Photo Organizers," The Wall Street Journal,
March 30, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111213157670592309,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Making Student Life Educational
Colgate’s effort comes while many colleges are struggling with how to promote
activities that revolve around more than drinking, and to maximize the education
students get outside the classroom. The push at Colgate also reflects a sense
that approaches focused solely on prohibition-style alcohol rules are doomed to
fail. One of the most novel Res Ed programs, “Breaking Bread,” is an attempt to
show students with divergent interests that they can meet in a relaxed
atmosphere, even if it isn’t over a beer. Breaking Bread gives students $100 to
go grocery shopping so long as dinner serves multiple student groups that do not
typically meet. “After the Constitution, the potluck dinner is the greatest
invention of democracy,” Weinberg said. One of Breaking Bread’s most resounding
successes was a feast for Sisters of the Round Table, an organization of
minority women, and Rainbow Alliance, a group for gay students. About 15
students sat down to corn bread, mac and cheese and fried chicken and talked
about gender issues in minority communities. “We talked about family experiences
and racism within the queer community,” said Jack Skelton, a senior who
identifies himself as queer. “It was a comfortable space to talk. It was
probably one of the better experiences I’ve had on campus.” Of course, many
student interactions will not be as positive as Skelton’s. But, Weinberg says,
even the classic nightmares of freshman year are potential “educational
moments.” “We don’t want to miss a great moment like that first dispute of
college with your roommate or neighbor,” Weinberg said, adding that it should be
a time to test problem solving skills. “There’s so much potential for learning
there.” It is all part of the vision Weinberg has for Res Ed, which he believes
will help produce not only educated students, but citizens ready to function in
a community. He noted that in the past, when students had problems with
neighbors, classes, facilities or administrators, they would come into his
office with “10-page manifestos” detailing “what they wanted me to do. Now, they
understand that this is their community, not a hotel, so they come in with
coherent, one-page memos, and make a business pitch about what they can do, and
how I can facilitate that. I’ve seen a complete cultural shift on this campus.”
David Epstein, "Making Student Life Educational," Inside Higher Ed, March 30,
2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/30/colgate
The Peak Oil Theory is Scary: Imagine empty
supermarkets and super cold (north) or super hot (south) living
The issue is Peak Oil, the theory that the world
will face a sudden, cataclysmic decline in supplies after global production
peaks in the next 20 years. According to McNamara, who believes it will happen
sooner rather than later, the direct impact on our lives will be greater than
terrorism, global warming or bird flu. "The challenges we face after Peak Oil
will require localised food production and industry in a way not seen for 100
years," he says. "Local rail lines and fishing fleets will be vital to regional
communities. Self-contained communities living close to work, farms, services
and schools will not be merely desirable; they will be essential."
Christopher Kremmer, "Running on empty," Sydney Morning Herald, April 2,
2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/01/1112302233942.html
The worst kind of
intolerance comes from what is known as reason.
Miguel de Unamuno
Atkins is out: Carbs back on menu
Atkins is out, carbs are back and low GI (glycaemic
index) is the weight-loss trend on everyone's lips. Britain is in the middle of
a GI frenzy, spurred in part by an Australian book. Professor Jennie
Brand-Miller, co-author of The Low GI Diet: Lose Weight With Smart Carbs, said
the GI concept had caught on here, but not to the extent of Britain where
supermarket giant Tesco had begun to label selected foods with their GI rating.
"It's gone from not even registering in the UK to being really big in the last
three months," said Brand-Miller, whose New Glucose Revolution series has sold
more than 2 million copies in 12 countries.
"Carbs back on menu," Sydney Morning Herald, April 3, 2005 ---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/02/1112302292364.html
Political affiliations of the media ---
http://cs-people.bu.edu/anurodhp/mediaparty.htm
Jensen Comment: He seems to have left out Fox Network
Forbes Magazine prefers Firefox
This superior (Firefox)
browser was created by the Mozilla Foundation, a
not-for-profit group set up by AOL/Netscape refugees whose software benefits
from the collaborative efforts of open source development. One of the best
features of Firefox is tabbed browsing. You can keep open any number of Web
pages and toggle from one to another by simply clicking on its "tab." This keeps
your screen from being overrun by browser windows. No doubt Microsoft's Internet
Explorer will soon offer this handy feature. But there's more to like about
Firefox, including faster loading Web pages and virtual immunity from dreaded
spyware and adware. This browser comes set with a pre-activated pop-up blocker,
which allows you to selectively block specific advertisers like banner ads from
AOL, Doubleclick.net and RU4.com. There are more than 240 added functionality
tools that you can easily download, including FlashGot, Adblock, CookieCuller
and ForecastFox. Firefox is available across nearly all operating system
platforms.
"Firefox," Forbes ---
http://www.forbes.com/bow/b2c/review.jhtml?id=7702
Smoke a Skookum Creek premium pack: I wonder
if peyote is what make some packs premium
A Native American tribe in Washington state is
preparing to make and sell its own brand of cigarettes at a fraction of the cost
of mainstream brands in an effort to diversify its income for tribal members.
The Squaxin tribe, located on a small patch of land 50 miles southwest of
Seattle, will begin selling its "Complete" brand of cigarettes made by its
Skookum Creek Tobacco company for $16 for a carton of 10 packs. That's about the
price of two packs of premium-brand cigarettes in New York City, and well below
the $35 to $70 per carton normally charged in the United States. Premium brand
and generic cigarettes can be bought on other Indian reservations for as low as
$22 per carton. The tribe's cigarettes can be sold cheaply because the tribe is
not subject to most taxes paid by tobacco companies, said Kelly Corman, the
tribe's legal counsel and spokeswoman. The only tax that will apply is a state
tax, although even those proceeds will be used by the tribe instead of going to
Washington state.
Reed Stevenson, "Native American Tribe to Launch Own Tobacco Brand," Reuters,
April 2, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/ReutersApril2
Jensen Comment: My guess is that arbitragers will buy out everything before you
get a chance to see a pack on the reservation
Justices Say Law on Sex Bias Guards Against
Retaliation, Too
The Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that the federal law
barring sex discrimination in schools and colleges also prohibits school
officials from retaliating against those who bring sex discrimination
complaints. The 5-to-4 ruling resolved conflicting interpretations in the lower
courts over the scope of the law, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.
While the margin was narrow, the language of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's
majority opinion was sweeping. For Title IX's advocates, who have been placed on
the defensive in recent years by complaints from critics that the law's
obligations are too burdensome, the ruling was a decisive victory.
Linda Greenhouse, "Justices Say Law on Sex Bias Guards Against Retaliation,
Too," The New York Times, March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/30/politics/30scotus.html?
Organizations can give higher raises to
younger employees: This may impact on colleges
The city's decision to grant a larger raise to lower
echelon employees for the purpose of bringing salaries in line with that of
surrounding police forces was a decision based on a 'reasonable factor other
than age' that responded to the city's legitimate goal of retaining police
officers,'' Stevens wrote. Federal appeals courts previously were sharply
divided over whether the 1967 age bias law permits impact suits. Legal experts
have said workers making age bias claims generally win their lawsuits less than
one-third of the time.
"Court Lowers Threshold for Age Discrimination Suits," The New York Times,
March 30, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/AgeDiscMarch30
If you live and "work" in one state, you may
have to pay income tax in a state you don't set foot in during the year
In a case that could have wide implications for the
growing practice of telecommuting, New York's highest court ruled that a man who
lives out of state and works by computer for a New York firm must pay New York
state tax on his full income. The New York Court of Appeals said computer
programmer Thomas Huckaby, who lives in Nashville, Tenn., owed New York income
tax for his full salary, not just the time he spent working at his employer's
New York offices. Mr. Huckaby, whose home state doesn't have an income tax,
paid New York state tax on about 25% of his income over two years for the time
he spent working there for the National Organization of Industrial Trade
Unions. The court upheld a state tax-department ruling that all his income
should be taxed. That amounts to $4,387 plus interest. However, the ruling could
lead to much greater income for the state as it is applied to the growing field
of telecommuting.
"New York Court Puts Tax Bite On Telecommuting," The Wall Street Journal,
March 30, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111211594999192054,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Jensen Questions: Suppose a CPA telecommutes to an office in Manhattan, lives
in Nevada, and telecommutes entirely on her firm's clients in California.
Where is she supposed to pay a state income tax on her full salary? How can she
work it so a per diem for working on California clients from her Nevada home is
deductible? Would it be worthwhile to resign from her NY firm and simply start
outsourcing? Or would she owe a California income tax even if she's now
telecommuting out of her own firm in Nevada? Would she be entitled to moving
expenses if she moved closer to her clients but only telecommuted the same as
before she moved? Are the tax rules for moving expenses technologically
obsolete?
Soaring Revenues at the University of Phoenix
Revenues for the Apollo Group, which controls the University of Phoenix, for the
three months ending February 28 were more than 25 percent higher than the
comparable period a year ago, Apollo said in its quarterly earnings
report. Enrollments as of February 28 at Phoenix
and Apollo’s other institutions were also about 25 percent higher than they were
a year ago, 283,800 students compared to 227,800 students on February 29, 2004.
But those increases were not enough for some investors, who wanted to see more
growth, according to an
article in The Arizona Republic.
"Phoenix Rises," Inside Higher Ed, March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/03/30/quicktakes
Ice Age Blamed on Tilted Earth
But some scientists believe a larger effect could be
generated if the eccentricity fluctuations are coupled with the precession, or
wobble of the Earth’s axis. It's like what is seen with a spinning top as it
slows down. Earth’s axis is currently pointing at the North Star, Polaris, but
it is always rotating around in a conical pattern. In about 10,000 years, it
will point toward the star Vega, which will mean that winter in the Northern
Hemisphere will begin in June instead of January. After 20,000 years, the axis
will again point at Polaris. Huybers said that the seasonal shift from the
precession added to the eccentricity fluctuations could have an important effect
on glacier melting, but he and Wunsch found that the combined model could not
match the timing in the sediment data.
Michael Schirber, "Ice Ages Blamed on Tilted Earth," Live Science, March
30, 2005 ---
http://www.livescience.com/forcesofnature/050330_earth_tilt.html
Jacoby’s “age of academe” may be winding
down and a new era emerging
Today, however, there are signs that Jacoby’s “age of
academe” may be winding down and a new era emerging. While universities continue
to play an important role in intellectual culture, increasingly they are no
longer the only game in town. With the rise of the knowledge economy and the
spread of decentralizing technology, the academy is ceding authority and
attention to businesses, nonprofits, foundations, media outlets, and Internet
communities. Even more significant, in my mind, the academy may be losing
something else: its hold over many of its most promising young academics, who
appear more and more willing to take their services elsewhere — and who may
comprise an embryonic cohort of new “postacademic intellectuals” in the making.
Diana Rhoten, "Mind the Gap," Inside Higher Ed, April 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/careers/2005/04/04/rhoten
If your thesis offends two Students, you may
lose Your Job
Tschaepe said that he thinks the students and
administrators overreacted to his thesis because it dealt in part with Deep
Throat, comparing the porn classic to more contemporary examples of the genre.
But Tschaepe stressed that the thesis featured no illustrations, had scenes
described “in a clinical almost biological way,” and was focused on ideas, not
sex. “We’re talking about Lacanian psychoanalysis,” he said, “not porn.”
Scott Jaschik, "Offend 2 Students, Lose Your Job," Inside Higher Ed,
April 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/04/adjunct
Transparency or a ‘Selig Strategy’?
The polar extreme of these viewpoints, of course, is
David Horowitz’s Academic Bill of Rights (ABOR), which the AAUP has formally
condemned as a political intrusion into the academy. The “Selig Strategy,”
however, represents a remarkably ineffective response to the ABOR movement.
Public support for ABOR derives from a perception that most professors have
little interest in restoring intellectual diversity to the academy. In light of
scandals at such prestigious institutions as Columbia and Colorado, faculty
organizations issuing blanket assertions that all is well in their ranks and
dismissing outside criticism as illegitimate only reinforces the impression that
the professoriate has something to hide regarding the ideological tenor of
classroom instruction. There are, of course, occasions — the McCarthy Era was
one, the early stages of the Vietnam War, perhaps, another — that justify
aggressively utilizing the principle of academic freedom to prevent
inappropriate outside scrutiny. But higher education, like baseball, is an
institution whose survival depends on public support. Just as Mark McGwire
sacrificed the public’s trust when he told congressmen that he would not “talk
about the past,” so too will higher education’s public standing be diminished by
continued claims that academic freedom allows the professoriate to ignore
allegations of ideological bias. Even institutions not reliant on taxpayer
support cannot long flourish in an atmopshere of widespread public distrust of
the academy’s values.
K.C. Johnson, "Transparency or a ‘Selig Strategy’?" Inside Higher Ed,
April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/01/johnson
Grants for pluralism and academic freedom
The Ford Foundation has announced a new program to promote “pluralism and
academic freedom” in higher education. Grants of up to $100,000 will be awarded
to colleges that “create a campus environment where sensitive subjects can be
discussed in a spirit of open scholarly inquiry and intellectual rigor and with
respect for different view points.” In other foundation news, The New York Times
reported that grants by foundations increased in 2004, following two years of
declines.
Inside Higher Ed, April 4, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/04/quicktakes
One of the biggest cases of fraud in the
history of science.
For centuries, the 7-foot marble figure of the
mythological Atlas has bent in stoic agony with a sphere of the cosmos crushing
his shoulders. Carved on the sphere — one of only three celestial globes that
have survived from Greco-Roman times — are figures representing 41 of the 48
constellations of classical antiquity, as well as the celestial equator, tropics
and meridians. Historians have long looked on the Atlas as a postcard from the
past — interesting largely as astronomical art. But as Schaefer approached, he
began to notice subtle details in the arrangement of the constellations. It
wasn't that anything was wrong with the statue. If anything, the positions of
the constellations were too perfect to be mere decoration. He was more than a
little intrigued. No, this was no mere piece of art. Taking out his camera, he
was about to take a journey through the centuries to unravel one of the great
mysteries of the ancient world and uncover key evidence in what may be one of
the biggest cases of fraud in the history of science.
"Ptolemy Tilted Off His Axis," LA Times, March 30, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/tiltMarch30
He got what he deserved: The robber was left
holding a bag of poop
The robber was left holding a bag of poop. That's all
he had to show for the holdup of a 32-year-old woman walking her dog Monday
night on Monroe Avenue in Kensington.When the gunman realized what was in the
baggie he had just grabbed, he threw it down in disgust and repeatedly demanded
money, pointing a gun at the woman, police said. After a third demand, he turned
the gun toward the woman's small dog, Misty. "He pulled the trigger on the gun
twice, but it didn't fire," said...
Joe Hughes,"Armed Robber's Luck with Dog Walker Stinks - LOL!!!"
Union-Tribune, March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20050330-9999-7m30misty.html
We can only hope the victim was also talking
in her sleep
A 911 operator in Anne Arundel County, Md., faces
accusations of sleeping on the job -- but she's not the first. This time, a
supervisor caught the dozing dispatcher last Sunday before it could affect any
emergency calls, WBAL-TV in Baltimore reported. A caller to 911 heard, for
almost two minutes, snoring while calling in an emergency last August. Since
then, authorities have increased lighting at the dispatch center and added
"911 Dispatcher Falls Asleep During Call," WFTV.com, March 30, 2005 ---
http://www.wftv.com/news/4329110/detail.html
e-Learning Glossary compiled by Eva Kaplan-Leiserson
---
http://www.learningcircuits.org/glossary.html
Bob Jensen's links to glossaries are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/245gloss.htm
Oh! Oh! I've been found out!
Doesn't it scare you, a world of ignoramuses with no
memory other than that of their computers?
Harold Irving Bloom
It may not be a good idea to open up Web
greeting cards sent by your friends
Beware of Web postcards bearing greetings. That's the
advice from the SANS Institute's Internet Storm Center, which is warning about
e-mail messages that pose as Web postcards and then direct recipients to a Web
site that installs a Trojan horse proThe new attacks use sophisticated
social-engineering techniques to trick users into installing Trojan horse
remote-access programs that can fool antivirus and firewall software by
appearing to be authorized applications like Internet Relay Chat software,
according to the
Internet Storm Center (ISC).
"Web Postcards Hide Trojan Horse Programs: Instead of friendly greetings,
malicious software installs on your PC," PC World, April 5, 2005 ---
http://www.pcworld.com/news/article/0,aid,120296,00.asp
It's allegedly in the Koran: Scholar claims
the United States will cease to exist in 2007
Explaining his theory about the approaching extinction
of the US, the scholar went on to analyze many numbers and letters mentioned in
the Koran. He said a careful reading and analysis of words appearing in the
Opening and Yusuf suras show that the US will exist for only 231 years. How did
he reach that number? Silwadi said that by combing a number of suras hinting at
US sins he reached the numbers 1776 (the year the US achieved independence) and
231. He added the two numbers and the result was 2007, the year when the US is
expected to disappear.
Kgaked Abu Toameh, "Koran scholar: US will cease to exist in 2007," Jerusalem
Post, March 29, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/DeathOfUS
What are suras and ayas? See
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~humayra/Koran syllabus 2003.html
Some evangelists are betting on their faith:
I think maybe they've been swindled
"Most blessed of sons be Asher. Let him be favored by
his brothers and let him dip his foot in oil," Brown quotes from Moses's
blessing to one of the 12 Tribes of Israel in Deuteronomy 33:24. Standing next
to a 54-meter (177-ft)-high derrick at Kibbutz Maanit in northern Israel, Brown
said the passage indicated there is oil lying beneath the biblical territory of
the Tribe of Asher, where the agricultural community is located.
Geological surveys and an attempt by an Israeli-based
company to find oil at the same site 10 years ago, a venture he said was
abandoned for lack of funds, led Brown to pick the spot where new drilling will
begin this week. Brown said he raised money for "Project Joseph" from fellow
evangelical Christians in the United States. "From the investment standpoint,
they certainly hope to have a return of the money," he said. "But the basis of
it is Genesis, chapter 12." In that passage, God promises to shower blessings on
those who bless the "great nation" sired by the Hebrew patriarch Abraham.
Reuters, April 6, 2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/IsraelOil
Chili pepper may help you get out of bed in
the morning
Injections of the active ingredient found in red-hot
chili peppers may produce lasting pain relief in people with knee
osteoarthritis.knee osteoarthritis. And injections of Botox, the popular
wrinkle-smoothing drug, may treat many painful ailments, say experts who
presented evidence at the annual meeting of the American Pain Society in Boston.
Denise Mann, "Chili Pepper, Botox Injections Help Ease Pain: Capsaicin
Injections Soothe Osteoarthritis; Botox Helps Many Types of Pain, WebMDhealth,
April 6, 2005 ---
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/104/107237.htm?z=1727_00000_5024_hv_03
Boy was he compensated for bad
performance: I think his parents should've cut back on his allowance
$51,600,000+ total compensation of John Antioco, CEO
of Blockbuster video chain in 2004
$1,250,000,000 net loss of Blockbuster video chain in 2004 that was accompanied
by a 47% decline in share prices.
Time Magazine, April 11, 2005, Page 16
Salary differentials among
female college graduates on the job in 2003
$43,656 among Asian American women
$41,066 among African American women
$37,761 among white American women
Time Magazine, April 11, 2005, Page 16
Jensen Comment: The lower mean for white women might be due in part to size
differentials in these groupings. There are many more white women applying for
jobs. It may also be due to other factors such as affirmative action and the
speculation that non-white women who finish college often had more of a struggle
and are, therefore, more motivated toward high job performance. Always remember
that the biggest liars of the world, outside of accountants and lawyers, are
statisticians.
The Female Early Life Career Crisis:
Announcing a Webcast on this crisis
You have likely seen the considerable attention the
press has given to the notion that large numbers of highly-qualified women are
opting out of mainstream careers. The recent coverage is spurred by a new
research study published in this month's Harvard Business Review. The research
was co-funded by Ernst & Young LLP, Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers, all
members of the Hidden Brain Drain Task Force, a private sector initiative that
is investigating this phenomenon. Now you can learn more about it from the
people who can provide an inside look: The co-authors of the report, Ernst &
Young's Carolyn Buck Luce and the Center for Work-Life Policy's Sylvia Ann
Hewlett, as well as Catalyst's Ilene H. Lange. The numbers reveal why this is a
critical topic: nearly four in 10 women with a graduate degree, professional
degree or high-honors undergraduate degree have left the workforce voluntarily.
As many as 93 percent of those who leave want to return to work, but only 74
percent find jobs, and just 40 percent return to full-time, professional jobs.
An especially worrying statistic for the business sector in an increasingly
tight labor market – none of these women want to return to their former
companies. Join Ernst & Young LLP for an innovative Thought Center Webcast that
will discuss what companies can do to keep talented women on the road to success
and offer ongoing support for them as they pursue their careers. Our panelists
will offer insights into practical steps employers can take to redefine the
workplace, including: Alternative “pathways to power” that provide less linear
career paths Flexible work arrangements that provide interesting, meaningful
work Ideas and insights into how companies can help women reclaim and sustain
ambition Elimination of "push" factors that can make women want to leave your
organization And much more!
Message from E&Y announcing the April 15, 2005 Webcast
http://www.ey.com/webcast?ir&pid=69
The Female Midlife Crisis
The "midlife crisis" has long been thought of as
something that afflicts men and often involves expensive toys and second wives.
But the Wall Street Journal's Work & Family columnist, Sue Shellenbarger, says
that as gender roles change, women are increasingly experiencing their own
version of these upheavals. What follows is adapted from her new book, "The
Breaking Point: How Female Midlife Crisis Is Transforming Today's Women."
Sue Shellenbarger, "The Female Midlife Crisis: More Women Than Men Now Report
Upheaval by Age 50; The ATV Tipping Point," The Wall Street Journal, April 7,
2005; Page D1
Jane Fonda's entire life was mostly a staged
performance
When I was on the faculty of the University of Maine, the Bangor Daily News
made a big, daily, deal when Jane Fonda stayed in Bangor for several weeks
with her children in tow. I never met her, but our best friends had two
daughters on the Bangor High School swim team. Their swimming coach was the
reason Jane came to town. She worked every day trying to perfect the dive that
ultimately appeared near the end of one of my favorite films --- On Golden Pond
---
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0082846/
Purportedly she was a very good mother and a very good person who was not at all
like the picture of her painted by the media.
Her new biography entitled My Life So Far
(Random House) is amazingly candid for an autobiography and really held my
attention. What stands out the most is the difference between her public
persona and her inner reality. Our image of Jane is that of a highly-talented,
fiercely independent, and deeply rooted anti-establishment female. She,
however, portrays herself as a rejected, insecure, naive, and flubbery woman
whose public image arose out of trying to mold herself to what the men in her
life (famous father and three tabloid husbands) wanted her to be. She wanted
desperately to please them in ways they wanted to be pleased. Her husbands, in
turn, were enormously and openly promiscuous and unfaithful while married to
Jane. Her French husband (Roger Vadim) wanted her to be a sex toy and she
became remarkably good at it, often in threesome romps with his prostitutes.
Her second husband (Tom Hayden) was a notorious anti-establishment politician
who pushed her four-square into the Viet Nam anti-war movement to a point where
she became known as the Hanoi Jane who played into the hands of the enemy
propaganda machine. She will never be forgiven by many military veterans who
allege that she aided and abetted the torture and killing of American prisoners
of war. Her third husband (Ted Turner) mostly wanted her bagged in his vast
trophy case. What is most interesting is what a highly atheist turned Christian
Jane Fonda has now become in the autumn of her life without a husband or any
other man in her private life. She's had botched face lifts and is suffering
from arthritis and is awaiting a hip transplant.
I recommend that you buy her book. The money is
going to a good cause for troubled young women.
Jane Fonda quotations from her book:
On her life-long, bulimia, obsession to be
skinny
I remember (as a young girl) cutting out a magazine ad
that said with $2 and some box tops they would send you a special kind of gum
that had tapeworm eggs in it and when you chewed it the worms would hatch and
eat up all the food you consumed. It sounded like a splendid idea to me --- a
way to have your cake and eat it too, so to speak.
French Orgies
Sometimes there were three of us, sometimes more (women in bed with
her and Vadim). Sometimes it was even I who did the
soliciting. So adept was I at burying my real feelings and compartmentalizing
myself that I eventually had myself convinced that I enjoyed it. I'll tell you
what I did enjoy: the mornings after, when Vadim was gone and woman and I would
linger over our coffee and talk. For me it was a way to bring some humanity to
the relationship, and antidote to objectification.
Hanoi Jane
It is possible the Vietnamese had it all planned. I will never know. If they
did, can I really blame them? The buck stops here. If I was used, I allowed it
to happen . . . and I continue to pay a heavy price for it . . . I realize
that it's not just a U.S. citizen laughing and clapping on a Vietnamese
antiaircraft gun; I'm Henry Fonda's privileged daughter who appears to be
thumbing my nose at the country that provided me these privileges. More than
that, I am a woman which makes my sitting there even more of a betrayal. A
gender betrayal.
Trophy Wife
It was not encouraging (before her marriage to Ted Turner). Someone gave me an
article about his life that revealed he probably had a drinking problem. Not
what I needed --- again. A friend of one of his children whom I happened to
know told me he liked only younger women and if he was interested in me, it
would only be as a notch in his belt. Of course there were lots of positives as
well: his environmentalism, his global vision, his work for peace.
The Real Jane
I didn't find something revealing about the real Jane in this most revealing
autobiography. Perhaps there is not a real Jane Fonda other than a woman who
succumbed to impulses in her life-long and always failing quest to be accepted
and loved. Money and fame do not always, or even usually, buy happiness. She
does seem much more content and happy in the autumn of her life at a time when
it is no longer necessary to mold herself to any one man.
Not so willing to forgive Jane Fonda
But that picture--dreadful as it was--was hardly the
only appalling thing about that trip and the truth is she probably was ready and
willing to shoot down American pilots. At the time she was in Hanoi, Fonda, for
all practical purposes, was a Communist herself. She was certainly rooting for
Ho Chi Minh's military to defeat the "imperialist" United States of America
involved in the supposedly "criminal" war against that lovely Red regime in the
north. She fully embraced Communists, communism and revolutionaries in 1972 and
way beyond that date. Her heroes were Black Panther thugs such as Huey Newton
and Red dictators such as Fidel Castro. We know of her revolutionary ardor
because she used to run off at the mouth about her views. The Detroit Free
Press, for instance, quotes her as saying in a Nov. 22,1969, Michigan State
University speech: "I would think that if you understood what communism was, you
would hope, you would pray on your knees that we would someday become
Communist." That statement has been quoted for years (in HUMAN EVENTS among
other places) and has never been denied and is certainly not apologized for (or
explained away) in her new memoir. Here's another Fonda gem. On July 18, 1970,
the People's World, the West Coast's Communist Party publication, carried a
telephone interview with Fonda in which she said: "To make the revolution in the
United States is a slow day by day job that requires patience and discipline. It
is the only way to make it. . . . All I know is that despite the fact that I am
one of the people who benefit from a capitalist society, I find that any system
which exploits other people cannot and should not exist."
Allan H. Ryskind , "Sorry, Jane, Apology Not Accepted," Online Human Events,
April 8, 2005
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=7093
Up in my home in Sugar Hill, I'm thinking of
replacing some of my maple trees with palm trees
As temperatures rise and weather patterns become more
erratic, New England's maple trees are facing growing threats that may
eventually force syrup aficionados and leaf-peepers out of the region and into
Canada.
Christa Farrand, "Climate change could sour US maple sugaring," The Christian
Science Monitor, April 6, 2005 ---
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0406/p11s01-sten.html
You will never hear the end of Bob Jensen: I
plan to keep posting daily Tidbits on my tombstone
If you want your tombstone to be about you, you'd
better speak up. Otherwise, whoever is in charge of picking out your marker
might decide to chisel something along the lines of: "Enough about him. Let me
tell you about me." Gravesites such as Mr. Astaire's are worth considering
because, with grave markers going high-tech, it's getting even more crucial for
us to articulate how we want to be memorialized. We have entered the age of
customized tombstones that can feature audio-taped messages from the deceased,
and laser-etched portraits of their pets or cars.
Jeff Zaslow, "Having a Say in Your Epitaph: The Challenge of High-Tech
Tombstones," The Wall Street Journal, April 7, 2005; Page D1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111283344036700294,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
On Campus, Free Speech at Odds With Tax
Funding
On March 10, an event titled "Patriarchy Slam" was held
by the radical Feminist Action League in a room reserved by a second and
recognized student group. (The significance of this is that the free room was
used in violation of UNH policy.) Posters across the campus advertised the
meeting as a public event, with no indication of "Women Only."
Wendy McElroy, "On Campus, Free Speech at Odds With Tax Funding," Fox News,
April 07, 2005 ---
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,152553,00.html
Confessions of a Politically Incorrect
Professor
I am European and came to America in 2002, where I
teach at an elite Liberal Arts College. My native country is among the most
socialized in the world, with strong leftist parties, from democratic socialists
to outright communist. All across Europe the left – the far left, somewhere
between Dennis Kucinich and Howard Dean – has a very strong political position,
as well as a clearly visible presence on university campuses. Despite my
European background I found myself deeply surprised by the political bias on
college campuses here in America. Left-wing bias is almost undetectable among
European college faculty compared to America’s academic institutions. The bias
that I have encountered has so many facets that I am still encountering new
ones.
Anonymous, "Confessions of a Politically Incorrect Professor,"
FrontPageMagazine.com. April 6, 2005 ---
http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=17622
At last there is a logical explanation why
the academy is liberal: Republicans are too anti-science to become good
professors.
Republicans are too anti-science to become good
professors. That's the essence of Paul Krugman's recent New York Times column
explaining why there are so few Republican college professors. Of course, recent
events at Harvard indicate that it's the academic left that rejects science.
Harvard's President Larry Summers was castigated for suggesting that politically
incorrect science be conducted. Dr. Summers infamously suggested that
researchers consider the possibility that biology partially explains the dearth
of female science professors. For this comment, his Arts and Science faculty
passed a resolution expressing lack of confidence in him, and the presidents of
Stanford, MIT and Princeton published a letter saying that "speculation that
'innate differences' may be a significant cause of under representation by women
in science and engineering may rejuvenate old myths and reinforce negative
stereotypes and biases." So acting with the approval of their leftist faculties,
the presidents of Stanford, MIT and Princeton have condemned Larry Summers for
the crime of politically incorrect speculation. Nothing could possibly be more
anti-scientific then rejecting speculation.
James D. Miller, "Font Size: The Science Haters," Tech Central Station,
April 6, 2005 ---
http://www.techcentralstation.com/040605B.html
Do we logically conclude that no member of
the Republican party should be allowed into the academy just in case self
selection is not working well?
Claims that liberal bias keeps conservatives off
college faculties almost always focus on the humanities and social sciences,
where judgments about what constitutes good scholarship can seem subjective to
an outsider. But studies that find registered Republicans in the minority at
elite universities show that Republicans are almost as rare in hard sciences
like physics and in engineering departments as in softer fields. Why? One answer
is self-selection - the same sort of self-selection that leads Republicans to
outnumber Democrats four to one in the military. The sort of person who prefers
an academic career to the private sector is likely to be somewhat more liberal
than average, even in engineering.
Paul Krugman, "An Academic Question," The New York Times, April 5, 2005
---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/05/opinion/05krugman.html?oref=login
Jensen Comment: I don't think it is fair to blame Republican professors for the
outrageous claims of the lunatic right any more than it is fair to blame all
Democratic professors for the lunatic fringe that applauds every time the U.S.
military loses in battle. My experience is that most professors of all
political persuasion pride themselves on individualism and academic pride that
sets it apart from dogma. Paul Krugman needs to learn how to back up his claims
with research.
These NASA scientists had to be liberal
according to Paul Krugman's reasoning
Now top researchers at the US National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (Nasa) say the calcified clumps of primitive bacteria
lurking in its pools could provide important clues in their search for
extra-terrestrial life. The network of 170 cactus-ringed lagoons around the town
of Cuatro Cienegas have intrigued evolutionary biologists for decades because
their fish, snail and turtle species rival the Galapagos Islands in their
uniqueness.
"Mexican lagoons intrigue Nasa," Aljazeera, April 5, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/435D892D-C3BB-4A3D-834A-DC5CD47FCEEE.htm
No self-respecting conservative scientist
would publish this research: But I like the findings from Down Under
But a new study shows that sex leads to faster
evolution. To demonstrate this, a team of scientists created a mutant strain of
yeast that, unlike normal yeast, was unable to divide into the sexual spores
that allow yeast to engage in sexual reproduction. Yeast can reproduce either
sexually or asexually. When testing this mutant strain in stress-free
conditions, the scientists found that it performed as well as normal yeast. In
more extreme conditions, however, the normal yeast grew faster than the asexual
mutants. This shows "unequivocally that sex allows for more rapid evolution,"
said Matthew Goddard of the School of Biological Sciences at the University of
Auckland in New Zealand. Goddard led the study, which is reported in this week's
issue of the science journal Nature.
Stefan Lovgren, "Sex Speeds Up Evolution, Study Finds," National Geographic
News, March 30, 2005 ---
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/03/0330_050330_sexevolution.html
Where are all the guys on each Canadian
campus? (Similar disparities are arising in the U.S.)
Where are all the guys on campus? If men outnumbered
women 515,000 to 375,000 in colleges, there'd be an uproar The Edmonton Journal
Fri 01 Apr 2005 Page: A18 Section: Opinion Byline: Lorne Gunter Of the 52
traditional bricks-and-mortar universities in Canada, only one has more male
students than female. Just one. Ontario's University of Waterloo has a
male-female ratio of 54 to 46, according to Maclean's magazine's 2005 Guide to
Canadian Universities. At all the rest -- every last one of them -- women
outnumber men. At Carleton University in Ottawa, it's nearly equal. The numbers
there reflect the...
Lorne Gunter, "Where are all the guys on campus?" Edmonton Journal, April
1, 2005 ---
http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/columnists/lorne_gunter.html
Does Professor Orr really think our business
education goal is to teach students how to "bust unions?"
Economics Professor Douglas Orr gave a short speech
highlighting some of the things that are happening in American universities.
“Almost every university in the United States has a school of business, and what
do they teach? They have got faculty members who teach how to bust unions. They
have faculty members who teach how to make your workers work harder for lower
wages, and if they protest, how do you suppress them. These things are taught in
every single business school in the United States, but then you ask the
question, how many of these schools teach how to organize a union? How many of
these schools teach how to organize resistance to oppression?” said Orr. He
continued by emphasizing what Professor Dean mentioned earlier. “What is going
on with Ward Churchill is the start of what we saw in the 1950s. It is a
systematic attempt to drive any voices of opposition out of the university in
this country; to give in an inch is to let them get started.”
Thomas Coghlan, "Rally draws hundreds for Ward Churchill," The Easterner,
March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.easterneronline.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/03/28/424a490538f5e
Jensen Question: Dear Professor Orr: I've been on the business faculties of
four universities. I've yet to see a course or even a course module on "How to
bust unions." Virtually all the courses I've seen are on how to improve
relationships between management and unions. Have you got a single example of a
business course in an AACSB-accredited university that teaches how to bust
unions?
Professor Orr denied my appeal to provide an
example of one accredited business education program or course that teaches how
to bust up unions.
Bob Jensen's threads on the saga of Ward Churchill are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/hypocrisyChurchill.htm
GM is one tiny step from the junk pile and
Ford is on its way
Moody's Investors Service on Tuesday cut General Motors
Corp.'s (GM.N) debt rating to a step above junk status, citing the world's
largest automaker's profit warning last month, and cautioned that it may
downgrade rival Ford Motor Co.
Reuters, The New York Times, April 6, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/business/business-autos-ratings.html
Just a few less calories may extend your life
Now, though, work done by Marc Hellerstein and his
colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, suggests that it may be
possible to have, as it were, your cake and eat it too. Or, at least, to eat 95%
of it. Their study, to be published in the American Journal of
Physiology—Endocrinology and Metabolism, suggests that significant gains in
longevity might be made by a mere 5% reduction in calorie intake. The study was
done on mice rather than people. But the ubiquity of previous
calorie-restriction results suggests the same outcome might well occur in other
species, possibly including humans. However, you would have to fast on alternate
days. Why caloric restriction extends the lifespan of any animal is unclear,
but much of the smart money backs the idea that it slows down cell division by
denying cells the resources they need to grow and proliferate. One consequence
of that slow-down would be to stymie the development of cancerous tumours.
"All you can't eat," The Economist, March 31, 2005 ---
http://www.economist.com/science/displayStory.cfm?story_id=3809652
How to select hospitals in your city/region
compare (you choose the criteria and the hospitals)?
When I compared San Antonio's Baptist Health System with the Methodist System, I
got some surprising results.
In a move to provide clear, unbiased information about
the quality of hospital care, Medicare is launching a Web-based database that
consumers can use to see for themselves how local institutions stack up against
each other. The Web site, Hospital Compare, went live late yesterday, offering
data on 17 widely accepted quality measures in treating heart attack, heart
failure and pneumonia. It shows how most of the nation's general hospitals
perform compared with state and national averages, as well as against their
peers. "This is another big step toward supporting and rewarding better quality,
rather than just paying more and supporting more services," says Mark McClellan,
a physician who heads the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which
oversees federal health-care programs for seniors and low-income people. The
government "ends up paying more when a patient gets poor-quality care and is
readmitted" to the hospital, he added.
Rhonda L. Rundle, "Medicare Puts Data Comparing Hospitals Onto Public Web Site,"
The Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111231128175394880,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
The Hospital Care comparison site is at
http://www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov/
I don't think academic freedom
militants will rally behind Warrior and well they should not
Warrior, a former professional wrestler
who goes by that single name, gave a lecture at the University
of Connecticut on Tuesday that degenerated into a shouting match
when he criticized gay people and made comments about needing a
towel while answering a question from an Iranian
student, according to an
article in The Daily Campus (free
registration required).
Scott Jaschik, "Talk Degenerates at UConn," Inside Higher Ed,
April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/07/quicktakes
The “vulgarity
debate” among bloggers
The “vulgarity
debate” that broke out among Persian bloggers in
late 2003 (discussed in my last
column) has no exact parallel in the
American scene. But as
Henry Farrell
pointed out last week, some of the same tensions
can be felt along the borders where blogging
intersects with established professions and
institutions of journalism and scholarship. And
no surprise, either: While Iranian academics and
writers were initially provoked by the bad
grammar and guesswork spelling that prevailed in
Weblogestan, the deeper issue is structural — a
divide that cuts through any culture.
Scott McLemee, "Of Blogs and Dialogues,"
Inside Higher Ed, April 5, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/05/mclemee
Opinions of the best and the
brightest young people
A sample of 40 exceptional students -- 10 of whom got
perfect scores on their SATs -- can't capture the talents or attitudes of all
1,600 students who entered the competition. It's an even blurrier reflection of
all the high schoolers around the country who seriously pursue science. But the
sample does show what's possible when gifted kids are nurtured by caring
parents, challenged by high expectations in school, encouraged to explore what
interests them, and given a chance to work with mentors at universities and U.S.
national laboratories. And by surveying the finalists, BusinessWeek was able to
glimpse how top-performing students would shape government science policies if
they were handed the opportunity . . . After all, most children aren't math
wizards, any more than they're musical prodigies. But that doesn't mean mediocre
performance is destiny. Schools need to foster more interest in science in the
lower grades. And middle-school teachers should toss tougher challenges at
girls, in particular. Greater emphasis should also be placed on mentors, the
students say, with colleges expanding outreach programs; and high schools with
no nearby university could form volunteer mentoring clubs staffed with their
best students and parents. Ultimately, America's educational system needs to pay
as much attention to bright students as it does to slow learners. That would
give more U.S. kids a better chance to stand tall in international comparisons.
And it just might help counteract the scientific illiteracy that threatens to
drag down the performance of American businesses.
"Meet The Best And Brightest: Forty gifted U.S. high school science students
told us what matters to them," Business Week, March 28, 2005 ---
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_13/b3926401.htm
Also see
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/toc/05_13/B39260513sts.htm
Why do many investors prefer concentrated
rather than diversified portfolios?
It is always nice when research confirms what we had
theorized. For instance Ivkovich, Sialm, and Weisbenner show that when investors
take highly undiversified positions, they on average earn higher returns than
when they are diversified. However before you scrap all diversification theory,
these higher returns come at the expense of added risk. Why would investors hold
a "concentrated" portfolio? It could be because of fixed transaction costs or
because of information advantages, or because of what collectively could be
called behavioral reasons.
Jim Mahar commenting on "SSRN-Portfolio Concentration and the Performance of
Individual Investors," by Zoran Ivkovich, Clemens Sialm, and Scott Weisbenner ,
TheFinanceProfessor.com, April 5, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Should the Fed prick the bubbles?
There is always a debate as to the role of the Fed when
it comes to asset "bubbles." For instance, the Fed was criticized by many after
the internet bubble. What is the correct role? Hands off? Active
interventionist? Fed Governor Edward Gramlich gave his view to a "conference
hosted at Princeton University." His view? Basically hands off:
Jim Mahar, "What is the role of the Fed with respect to asset price bubbles?,
TheFinanceProfessor.com, April 2, 2005 ---
http://financeprofessorblog.blogspot.com/
Nation’s humanities and social sciences
departments suffer from a lack of intellectual and programmatic diversity?
This “Selig Strategy” could also describe the academy’s
response to indications that the nation’s humanities and social sciences
departments suffer from a lack of intellectual and programmatic diversity. Calls
for outside inquiries have been denounced as violations of academic freedom,
while few if any signs exist that the very internal academic procedures that
created the problem can successfully resolve it. Instead of imitating baseball’s
strategy of trying to cover up relevant information, the academy should bring
transparency to the now-cloaked world of faculty hires and in-class instruction,
compiling and publicizing the necessary data, probably through college and
department Web sites. Such a response would allow the educational establishment
to employ the habits of the academic world, namely reasoned analysis through use
of hard evidence, to address (and, when false, disprove) specific allegations of
ideological bias. At the same time, the exposure associated with greater
transparency might deter those professors inclined to abuse their classroom
authority for indoctrination.
K.C. Johnson, "Transparency or a ‘Selig Strategy’?" Inside Higher Ed,
April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/01/johnson
Self selection versus discrimination: In any
case there is little evidence of efforts for diversity
Harvard’s facetious moniker, “The Kremlin on the
Charles,” may be more accurate than previously speculated, according to a report
released last week. The study, published in The Forum, an online social science
journal, concluded that discrimination may account for a reported dearth of
conservatives in academia. According to the study, 72 percent of professors at
U.S. universities identify themselves as liberal and just 15 percent as
conservative. At elite schools, the gap was more pronounced, with 87 percent of
faculty self-identifying as liberal and only 13 percent as conservative. The
study was based on a 1999 survey of 1,643 full-time faculty at 183 four-year
schools . . . Kenan Professor of Government Harvey C. Mansfield ’53 says he is
not surprised by the report’s findings. “Conservatives have a hard time in
academia,” Mansfield said. “Just look at my department. There are fifty
professors, and two or three are Republicans. How is that possible?” But
Graduate School of Education professor Julie A. Reuben, who had not fully
examined the study, said she was skeptical of the argument that discrimination
is to blame for the weak conservative voice on campus. “I would have assumed
that there is a high degree of self-selection rather than discrimination,”
Reuben said.
Sarah E.F. Milov, "Study Finds Academia May Favor Liberals," The Crimson
from Harvard University, April 7, 2005 ---
http://thecrimson.com/today/article506877.html
The lawyers always get the best
part of the carrion or control who gets the choice parts
What's received less notice is where Mr. Hevesi has
been steering the gargantuan legal fees associated with the
(WorldCom) settlements. According to the New York Sun,
which has been virtually alone in covering the matter, the state retirement fund
happens to be represented by law firms that have made very generous political
donations to the comptroller. Such activity isn't illegal, but as the Sun put it
in a March 7 editorial, "It's enough to tempt one to speculate that these
proceedings aren't so much about the rule of law as they are about enriching,
via fees, Mr. Hevesi's class-action lawyers, who are also major contributors to
the comptroller's campaign." There's also the question of whether Mr. Hevesi's
moonlighting as lead plaintiff in the WorldCom class action is in direct
conflict with his day job as trustee of the state pension fund. The New York
retirement fund never owned WorldCom bonds, the basis for the suit against
underwriters like J.P. Morgan. But it did own J.P. Morgan stock, as well as the
stock of several other underwriters named in the class action. Mr. Hevesi's
fiduciary responsibility as class representative is to get maximum recovery from
the underwriters. But to the extent that these large settlements harm investment
banks and drive down their stock price, the retirement fund suffers. The only
group that makes out no matter what are the comptroller's plaintiffs' bar pals.
That's something U.S. District Judge Denise Cote might want to consider before
signing off on Mr. Hevesi's latest settlement with J.P. Morgan, which could
generate more than $300 million in new trial-lawyer fees.
"Comptrolling Legal Authority," The Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2005
---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111232186552295168,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
What caught my attention was his
claim that, because of U.S. taxes, Intel could build and operate a plant in
"Europe" cheaper than in the U.S. I find this hard to believe.
Otellini, who will become Intel's chief executive in
May, testified Thursday at a hearing of the President's Advisory Panel on
Federal Tax Reform that over the 10-year life of a modern chip factory, the
company would save $1 billion by placing the factory in Asia or Europe rather
than in the United States. He said Intel, the world's largest chip maker, would
make its decision this year. There would be some advantages to building in this
country, near Intel's other factories, Otellini said. But while trade barriers
and wage factors were significant issues in earlier decisions, taxes are now an
important consideration, he said.
John Markoff (article originally appeared in The New York Times),
"Otellini warns taxes could send plant overseas," CNET.com, March 29,
2005 ---
http://snipurl.com/IntelMarch29
Earnings Management Deception
The 1999 bulletin also said that if accounting
practices were intentionally misleading "to impart a sense of increased earnings
power, a form of earnings management, then by definition amounts involved would
be considered material." AIG hinted some errors may have been intentional,
saying that certain transactions "appear to have been structured for the sole or
primary purpose of accomplishing a desired accounting result."
Jonathan Weil, "AIG's Admission Puts the Spotlight On Auditor PWC," The Wall
Street Journal, April 1, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111231915138095083,00.html?mod=home_whats_news_us
Bob Jensen's threads on earnings management are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen//theory/00overview/theory01.htm#Manipulation
Bob Jensen's threads on the AIG mess are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/fraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
The business of education
Some other higher education businesses are not seeing the same level of activity
as for-profit higher education, the report said. There were very few purchases
or mergers in the textbook or digital content industries. However, Eduventures
noted a strong investment year for companies that provide technology
infrastructure or software to colleges. Blackboard, for example, pulled off an
IPO, while Jenzabar had a $35 million investment package.
Scott Jaschik, "For-Profit Interest," Inside Higher Ed, April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/01/finance
Does your university have a system for
investigating medical insurance excess billings?
Investigators found that Fortis erroneously used
occupation as a factor in determining small group insurance rates. Wisconsin
state law bars insurers from considering occupation in determining those rates,
although factors including age, sex and health of the group can be considered.
Excluding certain factors in setting rates helps insure more common rates and
smaller rate swings for small businesses, state regulators said. The amount that
was overbilled will be better known by early June, when Assurant must report a
more detailed account of the error to Wisconsin regulators, Susan Ezalarab,
director of the insurance commissioner’s Bureau of Market Regulations, told the
Business Journal of Milwaukee. Ezalarab declined to estimate how many customers
were affected, or how large Assurant’s reimbursement to those clients might be.
"Is Your Health Insurance Provider Overbilling You?" AccountingWeb, March
30, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100728
Make the French drink more wine --- or else
more dynamite!
French winegrowers have set off dynamite in government
offices to highlight their financial plight. Members of the radical CRAV
committee of winegrowers threw the explosives into a government agriculture
office in the southern town of Carcassonne, in France. France's wine sector,
which supports 75,000 jobs, is suffering from dwindling sales due to health
concerns and a campaign against drink driving. Exports have also fallen off due
to the weak dollar and competition from 'New World' wines. Producers say people
are now only drinking 58 litres per head, compared to 100 litres in the early
1960s. The government has promised 70 million euros in aid for embattled
winegrowers and 3.5 million euros to promote exports.
"Not Drinking Enough Wine," Sky News, April 1, 2005 ---
http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30200-13318981,00.html?f=rss
The brain's center of trust
The results suggest that a brain region called the
caudate nucleus lights up when it receives or computes data to make decisions
based on trust. The Baylor College of Medicine team based their findings on
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans of volunteers playing a money game.
BBC News, April 1, 2005 ---
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4397269.stm
Bravo Rami
An Israeli Arab schoolboy has outshone Jewish
counterparts to grab a share of victory in a school quiz on the history of
Zionism and the creation of Israel. Rami Wated, 12, and Jewish teammate Guy
Gothertz clinched a joint first place with an all-Jewish pair after being
quizzed on the history of Jewish nationalism, said Kobby Barda, spokesman for
the city of Tel Aviv, which sponsored the contest. Wated was the only Arab among
the 12 finalists. His prize was a modest plaque. "Despite the fact that many did
not believe that I would win, I prepared well ... It doesn't matter if you are
Jewish or Arab, just as long as you can prepare properly," Wated said on
Wednesday. He is a pupil at an Israeli Arab state school where the curriculum on
Jewish history is limited compared with that offered in Jewish schools.
"Arab boy wins Israeli school quiz on Zionism," Reuters UK, April 6, 2005
---
http://snipurl.com/ArabBoyApril6
Bush assassins' escape jail time
Oslo police officer Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby said on
Tuesday that the "United States embassy did not want to press charges". As the
US election campaign was in full swing in late October 2004, the group Gatas
Parlament - whose name means "the parliament of the streets - called
for donations on the website
www.killhim.nu
in order to pay anyone who succeeded in murdering Bush.
"
'Bush assassins' escape jail time," Aljazeera, March 31, 2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/6571DC08-B494-4DD8-8E12-32F352ED41AA.htm
A Media Intelligence Failure
We'll need time to dig through the details in the
600-plus-page Robb-Silberman report on intelligence that was released yesterday.
But one important conclusion worth noting, even on a quick reading, is that the
report blows apart the myth that intelligence provided by Iraqi politician and
former exile Ahmed Chalabi suckered the U.S. into going to war. That myth was a
media and antiwar favorite last year, before the U.S. and Iraq elections, and
when all of Washington thought President Bush was a one-termer. CIA and State
Department sources peddled the idea that an Iraqi defector code-named
"Curveball" had planted bad information about Saddam's WMD. "Curveball" was
widely broadcast as an agent of Mr. Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress,
with the not-so-subtle implication that his intelligence was used by the
Pentagon to deceive Mr. Bush into going to war.
"A Media Intelligence Failure," The Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2005,
Page A10 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111232202355295177,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
When Bill Bennett listens, people talk
In just one year, Bennett - variously known as
America's "drug czar" or, if you're The New York Times, the nation's "leading
spokesman" of traditional values - has managed to land 116 markets, including 18
of the top 20. By comparison, Al Franken's "Air America," conceived as the
antidote to conservative talk radio and launched a week before Bennett's show,
airs in just over 50 markets.
Kathleen Parker, "When Bill Bennett listens, people talk," Town Hall,
April 6, 2005 ---
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/kathleenparker/kp20050406.shtml
Nude Pix Put Cops In a Fix
Houston police officer Christopher Green, after
arresting a woman on suspicion of drunken driving, allegedly downloaded sexually
explicit pictures from her confiscated cell phone onto his PDA and then showed
them to several colleagues. Internal investigators have stepped in to examine
the situation and reports that Green's partner, George Miller, later called the
woman and asked her for a date. Both officers have been pulled from their usual
patrolling duties. "We're sort of waiting to see what's going to happen,"
Houston Police Officers' Union attorney Aaron Suder told the Houston Chronicle,
which broke the story Friday.
Libe Goad, "Nude Pix Put Cops In a Fix," eWeek, March 25, 2005 ---
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1779743,00.asp
Jensen Questions: Why was he looking in her cell phone in the first place? Did
he suspect a small flask was hidden there?
Citigroup Faces Gender-Bias Suit Over
Assignments
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San
Francisco by one current and three former California employees of Smith Barney,
alleges that the brokerage firm discriminated against women when its "virtually
all-male branch management" assigned accounts to brokers. The complaint seeks
class-action status on behalf of all Smith Barney female brokers in the U.S., as
well as some former brokers, a total of about 5,000. If class-action status is
granted by the federal judge handling the case, it would raise the stakes for
Citigroup, which already is busy trying to resolve problems stemming from
several unrelated scandals. "These claims are entirely without merit," a
Citigroup spokeswoman said. She maintained that "significant initiatives"
undertaken in recent years had made Smith Barney one of the industry's "most
progressive" workplaces with respect to equal opportunities.
Mitchell Pacelle, "Citigroup Faces Gender-Bias Suit Over Assignments," The
Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2005; Page C4 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111230963365294827,00.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing
Absurd quotes of the day:
Interspecies marriage is on the way
A Loveland Republican on Thursday warned that same-sex
marriage could one day lead to interspecies marriage, if the state fails to ban
gay nuptials. "Where do you draw the line?" Rep. Jim Welker asked. "A year ago
in India, a woman married her dog." Welker's comments were made at a news
conference called by Rep. Kevin Lundberg, R-Berthoud, to promote Lundberg's
proposal for a state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
Jim Hughes, "Gay-marriage foe irks fellow lawmakers with "extreme" talk," Denver
Post, April 1, 2005,
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~61~2792661,00.html
Jim Mahar posted the following at
his blog on March 31, 2005
A summary article on
volatility forecasting
When I was looking
at
research-Finance.com,I stumbled upon this one by
Andersen, Bollerslev, Christoffersen, and Diebold.
They provide a very interesting look at the volatility
forecasting. The piece is largely a summary article that
shows what has been done and the results. VERY good! It
is part of a forthcoming Handbook of Economic
Forecasting edited by Elliott, Granger, and Timmermann.
A warning: it is LONG! 114 pages.
The paper is also available through the
UPenn site
Suggested Citation
Andersen, Torben G., Bollerslev, Tim, Christoffersen,
Peter and Diebold, Francis X., "Volatility Forecasting"
(February 22, 2005). Penn Institute for Economic
Research (PIER), Research Paper Series
http://ssrn.com/abstract=678861
Computers Obeying Brain Signals
(forwarded by Debbie Bowling)
Researchers and volunteers around the world are taking
early steps toward a complex but straightforward technological goal: to use
electrical signals from the brain as instructions to computers and other
machines, allowing paralyzed people to communicate, move around and control
their environment literally without moving a muscle. Most dramatically, that
could help "locked-in" patients - those who've lost all muscle movement because
of conditions like Lou Gehrig's disease or brainstem strokes. Take a look at
what other people have accomplished lately with signals from their brains:
Malcolm Ritter, "Computers Obeying Brain Signals," IWON News, April 4,
2005 ---
http://apnews1.iwon.com/article/20050404/D898IAF80.html
Flashback on AIG Fraud (forwarded to me by
Miklos Vasarhelyi
[miklosv@andromeda.rutgers.edu]
American International Group Inc. agreed to pay a $10
million fine to settle Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that the
insurance company participated in an accounting fraud at Brightpoint Inc. The
SEC also alleged that New York-based American International, the world's largest
insurer by market value, failed to cooperate with its investigation. The SEC
charged Brightpoint with accounting fraud in a scheme to conceal losses by using
an AIG insurance policy. "AIG worked hand-in-hand with Brightpoint personnel to
custom-design a purported insurance policy that allowed Brightpoint to overstate
its earnings by a staggering 61 percent," said Wayne M. Carlin, director of
SEC's Northeast Regional Office in New York. Carlin said the transaction
amounted to a "round-trip" of cash from Brightpoint to AIG and back to
Brightpoint. In the past year, the SEC also has charged energy companies, such
as Reliant Resources Inc. and Reliant Energy Inc., in "round-trip" arrangements
that misled investors.
Reuters, "AIG Pays $10 Million Fine in Brightpoint Accounting Fraud," The New
York Times, September 11, 2003
You can read more about the recent AIG scandals at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm
You can read more about round tripping at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/eitf01.htm#RoundTripping
I have a longer quotation on this article at the above link. You can also read
about Enron's round trips to the plate.
Solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict may no longer be possible
A Palestinian legislator has warned that a genuine
solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict may no longer be possible, due to
what he called Israel's wanton settlement expansion in the West Bank and East
Jerusalem.
Khalid Amayreh, "Fatah legislator paints bleak scenario," Aljazeera, April 6,
2005 ---
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/2DB81B23-1E90-4A0B-99F8-0143B62F0289.htm
Ramallah, West Bank --
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas expressed satisfaction yesterday after U.S.
President George W. Bush warned Israel against expanding any of its settlements
in the occupied territories. Mr. Abbas called on Israel "to take rapid measures
for the implementation of the road map and to stop totally its construction of
the wall and settlements on the ground in order to create the necessary
conditions to relaunch the peace process."
"Abbas applauds U.S. stand against Israeli settlements," Globe and Mail,
April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/TPStory/LAC/20050407/WORLD07-1/TPInternational/Africa
I receive a lot of requests on
how to find safe prescription medications at the least expensive prices.
The correct
link is
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#PhysiciansAndDrugCompanies
I also list three safe Canadian pharmacies where you will probably get your best
deals for safe drugs.
Bravo Portland
Thousands lined Portland's Congress Street on Friday to
cheer for the state's servicemen, its emergency workers and the NFL champion New
England Patriots. Billed as the city's biggest ticker-tape parade, the event
featured hundreds of soldiers, sailors and other members of the military
marching in front of an enthusiastic crowd, estimated at 30,000. Onlookers
bellowed excitedly as each contingent of soldiers paraded into view. The
marchers were met by shredded paper, a multitude of small U.S. flags and signs
that read: "Welcome Home Heroes" and "America Rocks!" Soldiers said they were
overwhelmed by the response, calling it a tremendous show of pride and support.
David Hench, "30,000 cheer for their heroes," Portland Press Herald,
April 8, 2005 ---
http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/news/local/050409parade4.shtml
Pope John Paul II was a
scholarly leader
Specialized knowledge is key to leadership along with
general studies. While Wojtyla had two doctorates in his field, he also studied
philosophy and literature and was also a playwright and a poet. If you were to
take an hour-a-day reading up in your field and applying the knowledge, within a
period of five years you would become an 'expert' within your field. People are
hungering and thirsting for a leader with knowledge and experience.
From Insight of the Day forwarded by Debbie Bowling on April 8.
An interesting article about
Pope John Paul II appears in The New Yorker
Karol Wojtyla, a poet, actor, and playwright, who had been a bishop in Poland
for twenty years, was elected Pope by the College of Cardinals on October 16,
1978. Shortly afterward, Yuri Andropov, the head of Soviet intelligence, called
the K.G.B.’s station chief in Warsaw and asked furiously, “How could you have
allowed a citizen of a Socialist country to be elected Pope?” The Warsaw
rezident, who, during his time in Poland, had developed a knowledge of at least
the rudiments of Church procedure, reportedly told Andropov that he would do
better to direct his inquiries to Rome
David Remnick, "JOHN PAUL II," The New Yorker, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/talk/content/articles/050411ta_talk_remnick
The distribution of the
Catholic population varies widely from one geographic area of the world to
another: the American continent is home to almost half the world's Catholics
(28.4% of the total number of Catholics live in South America and 14% in Central
and North America), while Europe accounts for 27.8% of the whole. Smaller
numbers are found in Africa (11.5%), Asia (10.4%, almost all concentrated in the
South-East) and Oceania (0.8%). The figures cited refer to 1998 and are
essentially the same as the previous year's, while differing slightly from those
of 1978. It is important to note the downward trend in the number of European
Catholics and the upward trend in Africa and Asia.
"THE CHURCH’S NUMERICAL STRENGTH CONTINUES TO GROW" ---
http://www.ewtn.com/library/CHISTORY/NMBRGROW.HTM
This is quoted from
http://www.religioustolerance.org/worldrel.htm
Basic information
on various religions:
Religion |
Date Founded |
Sacred Texts |
Membership |
% of World |
Christianity |
30 CE |
The Bible |
2,015 million |
33% (dropping)
5 |
Islam |
622 CE |
Qur'an & Hadith |
1,215 million |
20% (growing)
5 |
No religion * |
No date |
None |
925 million |
15% (dropping)
5 |
Hinduism |
1,500 BCE |
The Veda |
786 million |
13% (stable)
5 |
Buddhism |
523 BCE |
The Tripitaka |
362 million |
6% (stable)
5 |
Atheists |
No date |
None |
211 million |
4% |
Chinese folk rel. |
270 BCE |
None |
188 million |
4% |
New Asian rel. |
Various |
Various |
106 million |
2% |
Tribal Religions,
Animism |
Prehistory |
Oral tradition |
91 million |
2% |
Other |
Various |
Various |
19 million |
<1% |
Judaism |
No consensus |
Torah, Talmud |
18 million |
<1% |
Sikhism |
1500 CE |
Guru Granth Sahib |
16 million |
<1% |
Shamanists |
Prehistory |
Oral Tradition |
12 million |
<1% |
Spiritism |
|
|
7 million |
<1% |
Confucianism |
520 BCE |
Lun Yu |
5 million |
<1% |
Baha'i
Faith |
1863 CE |
Most Holy Book |
4 million |
<1% |
Jainism |
570 BCE |
Siddhanta, Pakrit |
3 million |
<1% |
Shinto |
500 CE |
Kojiki, Nohon Shoki |
3 million |
<1% |
Wicca |
800 BCE, 1940 CE |
None |
500,000? |
<1% |
Zoroastrianism |
No consensus |
Avesta |
0.2 million |
<1% |
|
Class action suits are troublesome, but often
these are the only resort for bilked investors
You claim the lawyers are the only ones who make out.
That's wrong. So far, despite the fact that that the issuer, WorldCom, is
bankrupt, we have obtained settlements totaling $4.8 billion for bondholders and
$1.2 billion for stockholders. That's the biggest settlement in history by far
for bondholders and the second biggest for stockholders. These suits are about
money and losses, but they are more about rebuilding confidence in the
underlying values of our economic and political institutions.
Alan G. Hevesi, New York State Comptroller, "WorldCom's World Record Fraud,"
The Wall Street Journal, April 8, 2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111292210015601586,00.html?mod=todays_us_opinion
Bob Jensen's threads on the WorldCom scandal are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudEnron.htm#WorldcomFraud
How difficult it is to digitally photograph
some three dimensional items like tapestry
At imas, the brothers set about building a new
series of computers of Chudnovskian design. The latest of these is a powerful
machine of a type called a cluster of nodes. The brothers ordered the parts
through the mail. It sits inside a framework made of metal closet racks and
white plastic plumbing pipes, and the structure is covered with window
screens—those parts of the machine came from Home Depot. The brothers refer to
their computer cluster modestly as “nothing.” Alternatively, they call it “the
Home Depot thing.” “To be honest, we really call it It,” Gregory explained.
“This is because It doesn’t exactly have a name.” They became interested in
using It to crack problems that had proved difficult, such as assembling large
DNA sequences or making high-resolution 3-D images of works of art.
Richard Preston, "CAPTURING THE UNICORN: How two mathematicians came to the
aid of the Met," The New Yorker, April 11, 2005 ---
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050411fa_fact
CBS: Getting to the ambush early for good
pictures
The video cameraman was wounded during a firefight in
northeastern Mosul between U.S. troops and insurgents Tuesday. U.S. military
officials said the man's camera held footage of a number of roadside bomb
attacks against American troops, and they believe he was tipped off to those
attacks. A U.S. military statement said troops believe the man "poses an
imperative threat to coalition forces" and that he "will be processed as any
other security detainee." CBS said the photographer was hired about three months
ago, and it asked news organizations not to identify him.
"U.S. military suspects cameraman of being an insurgent," CNN, April 8,
2005 ---
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/04/08/iraq.main/index.html
Bravo MIT: In the spirit of sharing in the
academy: Just proves once again that givers usually get in return
The gist is that four years into what was originally to
be a 10-year, $100 million project, MIT has put nearly 1,000 of its 1,800
courses online, and is on track to finish the work of building the site by 2008
at a cost of $35 million. (The university is just beginning the work of
estimating the costs of sustaining the OpenCourseWare project in a “steady
state” once the buildout is finished, but expects, once the foundation money
dries up, to absorb most of the annual costs in as its regular budget.) The site
gets about 400,000 unique visits each month, or about 20,000 a day. The
individual course pages contain items commonly available on other universities’
sites like syllabi and calendars, but also more unusual features like videotaped
lectures, laboratory simulations, lecture notes (either provided by the
instructor or taken by staff members of OpenCourseWare) and even exams —
sometimes with answers. MIT “scrubs” the material to make sure that it either
complies with its Creative Commons intellectual property license or is removed
from the site.The university’s project has spawned sites in
Spain and
China
that are providing native language versions of some MIT courses (with a third,
still unendorsed by MIT, beginning in Taiwan, and another expected to be
announced in Japan next month).
Scott Jaschik, "Spreading the Wealth," Inside Higher Ed, April 7, 2005
---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/07/mit
Faculty
participation in the MIT venture is voluntary, but about
two-thirds of MIT professors have their courses online now.
By offering to do much of the work for professors, the
OpenCourseWare effort has managed to limit the time faculty
members typically spend on getting materials for a course
online to under five hours.
And peer
pressure is building, Margulies says, not just to
participate, but to bolster the look and content of their
courses. “There has been a wholesale improvement of the
materials,” she says. Some of that movement is driven by
faculty members’ “own competitive pride of looking at what
their colleagues are doing,” she said, and some results from
other sources. “Students are asking faculty members why
their courses aren’t up.”
Margulies
gushes, and almost blushes, when she reads some of the ways
users of the site have described it in e-mail messages to
the OpenCourseWare staff: “Eighth wonder of the world,”
“coolest thing on the Internet,” “worthy of the Nobel Peace
Prize,” “like falling in love.”
“We’ve heard
all of those hundreds of times,” Margulies says. “Well,
except for ‘like falling in love’ — we’ve only gotten that
one once. We’re a bit concerned about that person.”
Read some of the winning essays of applicants
admitted to major graduate schools of business
You must be a paid subscriber to Business Week's MBA Insider to access
these essays. Business Week now provides sample essays of students that
were admitted to selected business schools at major universities ---
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/mbainsider/sample_essays.html
These are not limited to MBA programs in the United States. For example, there
are eight winning essays for admission to Cambridge
University in the United Kingdom.
I guess it's a free world but
not necessarily free speech when it comes to criticizing your
advertisers: My guess is that the editor bought a lemon
General Motors said yesterday that it
would stop advertising in The Los Angeles Times "until further
notice." A G.M. spokeswoman characterized the decision as the
culmination of a long-running dispute between the automaker and
the newspaper over how G.M. is portrayed. "It involves news
reporting, it involves opinion. It's pretty broad-based, and
we've made our objections well known to The Times," the G.M.
spokeswoman, Ryndee Carney, said. Ms. Carney would not cite
specific instances of the editorial content that rankled G.M.,
but coverage of the company, particularly in recent car reviews,
has been far from flattering. A headline on The Times's review
of the Pontiac G6 on Wednesday said, "At General Motors, let the
impeachment proceedings begin."
"G.M. to Halt Ads in The Los Angeles Times," The New York
Times, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/08/business/media/08paper.html
Jensen Comment: What is not clear is whether this applies to GM
dealers. My guess is that cutting out GM's corporate
advertising will have little impact on the LA Times.
Cutting out the dealer advertising could be devastating on
profits.
Update: The loss per year to
the newspaper may be upwards of $20 million per year ---
http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000874567
Duke’s iPod Experiment
Evolves
Last summer, in a move watched and copied in broad outline by
several other institutions, Duke University gave iPods to all
incoming freshmen, in the hope of stimulating technology use on
the campus. Wednesday, based on the results of a preliminary
review of the program, the university significantly
altered its approach, while declaring
the iPod experiment over all to be a success. Instead of
providing the digital audio and text devices to all freshmen,
Duke will in the 2005-6 academic year make iPods available to
undergraduates in any course for which Duke’s Center for
Instructional Technology has approved the professors’ use of the
devices. “This will enable faculty members who see uses for
iPods in their courses to build them into their course plans
with the assurance that all students, regardless of class, will
have iPods available for their use,” Peter Lange, Duke’s
provost, wrote in an
e-mail message to faculty members
announcing the change Wednesday.
Doug Lederman, "Duke’s iPod Experiment Evolves," Inside
Higher Ed, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/07/ipod
Brawl at Brown Over Who Owns Research
Sean Ling, an associate professor of physics and the
most outspoken critic of the policy, said it makes “inventors feel like slaves,”
and that he may need to leave Brown if the new rules are put in place. The
university says that the new policy is not anything unusual for higher
education, and that the distinctions that professors are making between
“university time” and their own time don’t reflect the realities of academe.
Sabbaticals and vacations “are benefits of appointment at Brown,” so it is
appropriate for the new policy to cover work performed during those periods,
according to an FAQ the university released with the proposed policy.
Scott Jaschik, "Brawl at Brown Over Who Owns Research," Inside Higher Ed,
April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/07/brown
Forget Big Brother: Now You Are
Being Watched by Almost Anybody ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#BigBrother
You will learn some things I bet you were not aware of before you read David’s
message.
Two sides to every story: Professor Massad
at Columbia University tells his side of the story
But he intends to stay on at the alma mater that hired him
in 1999 as an assistant professor of modern Arab politics and intellectual
history (this semester he is teaching two seminars) and gain tenure in 2006-7.
He is also seeking "protection" from the administration in order to reinstate
his controversial course "Palestinian and Israeli Politics and Societies," the
one nicknamed "Israel Is Racist" by detractors and crashed by hecklers who,
because Professor Massad is a fan of free speech, are allowed to have their say.
That was the 2002 class where Deena Shanker, a student he does not recall, says
he threatened her with ejection after she asked him if Israeli troops issued
warnings before bombing civilian areas, a claim the report found credible. "I
have never asked any student to leave a class; I never lose my cool," he says.
"I make it my business not to."
Robin Finn, "At the Center of an Academic Storm, a Lesson in Calm," The New
York Times, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/08/nyregion/08lives.html?
But the conservative side is often disrupted
with shouting and even pie in the face
David Horowitz
was hit in the face with a pie Wednesday during a speech at Butler University.
The attack was the third incident in the last 10 days in which a conservative
speaker has been doused with food while trying to speak on a Midwestern campus.
William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, was hit in the face with a pie
during a speech at Earlham College and Pat Buchanan, the former presidential
candidate, had salad dressing thrown on him at Western Michigan University.
Scott Jaschik, "Speech Interrupted," Inside Higher Ed, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/08/speech
Falling further and further behind
the Jetsons
These lackluster findings were consistent with middle
school test results obtained after Maine gave laptops to every seventh and
eighth grader in the state. Two years and thirty-four million dollars later,
math scores improved slightly, while writing, reading, and science either
dropped or didn't change. A University of Chicago study of the Internet's effect
on California classrooms similarly found "no evidence" that Internet access had
"any measurable effect on student achievement."
Peter Berrger. "Keeping Up With the Jetsons," The Irascible Professor,
April8, 2005 ---
http://irascibleprofessor.com/comments-04-08-05.htm
Jensen Comment: I think that Peter misses the point here. This is like saying
that, with all new appliances in the kitchen, your spouse cooks no better than
before. Computers are a mere learning tool, and achievement is based upon
learning results. If computers are intended to promote greater proficiency then
they might do so if used to their potential. Just having the computers and/or
using those computers on activities that do not particularly improve test scores
will not lead to better test scores. Achievement is more of a function of
concentrating on the learning tasks with or without computers. I addition,
Peter fails to recognize that just learning how to use computers will make
students better prepared for college and/or many types of careers in the modern
age. Students who can't use computers will find it harder to compete until they
pick up computer skills.
Criminals are banding together to steal
financial data from individual
Recent investigations of online identity-theft rings
show a disturbing pattern emerging, law-enforcement officials say. Large groups
of criminals are banding together to steal financial data from individuals, and
then trade or sell that data on underground Internet sites. One such case
involves Shadowcrew, an online marketplace for stolen credit-card and debit-card
information that U.S. agents shut down. The Web site, with some 4,000 members,
served as the backbone of an extensive criminal organization that traded at
least 1.5 million stolen credit-card numbers and caused total losses in excess
of $4 million, according to an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in
Newark, N.J., in October.
Cassell Bryan-Low, "Identity Thieves Organize: Investigators See New Pattern:
Criminals Team Up to Sell Stolen Data Over the Internet," The Wall Street
Journal, April 7, 2005; Page B1 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111282706284700137,00.html?mod=todays_us_marketplace
Bob Jensen's threads on
Identity Theft ---
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudReporting.htm#IdentityTheft
There's good news
about phishing: The growth of new attacks has slowed. But that's only because
attackers are building more sophisticated traps and using advanced technology to
perpetrate online fraud, researchers say.
Matt Hines, "Bigger phishes ready to spawn," CNet News, April 6, 2005 ---
http://news.com.com/Bigger+phishes+ready+to+spawn/2100-7349_3-5656070.html?tag=nefd.lede
Bob Jensen's threads on phishing are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/ecommerce/000start.htm#Phishing
Online search engine
leader Google has unveiled a new feature that will enable its users to zoom in
on homes and businesses using satellite images, an advance that may raise
privacy concerns as well as intensify the competitive pressures on its rivals.
The satellite technology, which Google began offering late Monday at
maps.google.com, is part of the package that the Mountain View-based company
acquired when it bought digital map maker Keyhole Corp. for an undisclosed
amount nearly six months ago . . . This marks the first time since the deal
closed that Google has offered free access to Keyhole's high-tech maps through
its search engine. Users previously had to pay $29.95 to download a version of
Keyhole's basic software package.
MSNBC News, April 5, 2005 ---
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7394347
The Google Map site is at
http://maps.google.com/
Note that you can read in U.S. postal zip code
numbers in the Search box. When the map comes up, also note the slider bar that
lets you zoom in or out. You can also use the arrow buttons to move up/down and
right/left.
Did you know you can simply
read in a phone number at
http://maps.google.com/
Then click on the satellite button.
This worked whenever I typed in home phone numbers of friends. It did not
work for my office phone number (took me to Coffeeville, Kansas) and
obviously cannot work for unlisted and cell phone numbers.
Coverdell Education Savings Account or ES
Americans, in general, are not savers. Not even when
the reason for saving is a good one: education. Uncle Sam has decided to try to
encourage saving for education by renaming and revamping the education IRA. The
new program is called a Coverdell Education Savings Account or ESA. It was
created as an incentive to help students and their parents save for education
expenses. Like the education IRA, an ESA is set up for a beneficiary under the
age of 18. Any individual, including the beneficiary, can contribute to the ESA
providing their modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) is less than $110,000
($220,000 for those filing joint tax returns). Total annual contributions to an
ESA cannot exceed $2,000, regardless of the number of ESAs created or the number
of contributors. Contributions can be made up until the tax-filing deadline,
April 15.
"New Name, Better Benefits for Education," AccountingWeb, April 4, 2005 ---
http://www.accountingweb.com/cgi-bin/item.cgi?id=100743
A quote from Katherine
After months of government investigations of
financial-engineering products in the insurance industry, the nation's
accounting rule makers said they will consider tightening standards that govern
how companies account for their dealings with insurance companies. The Financial
Accounting Standards Board yesterday voted unanimously to add a project to its
agenda aimed at clarifying when contracts structured as insurance policies
actually transfer risk from the policies' buyers, and when they don't. The
FASB's decision is an acknowledgment that the current accounting rules for the
insurance industry in many respects are porous. "We've got a specific problem
that's been brought to our attention in which there are allegations that the
accounting is not representationally faithful and not comparable," said
Katherine Schipper, a member of the FASB, the private-sector body that sets
generally accepted accounting principles. "So we need to craft a solution that
addresses that specific set of allegations."
Diya Gullapalli, "FASB Weighs Its Finite-Risk Rules: Accounting Body to Start
By Defining 'Insurance Risk'; Changes Could Take Years, The Wall Street
Journal, April 7, 2005; Page C3
Bob Jensen's threads on the insurance industry accounting scandals are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/FraudRotten.htm#MutualFunds
Audio broadcasts of FASB meetings are available
to listeners for FREE via the Internet. Meetings also are available via your
telephone on a pay-to-listen basis (see below). To access an FASB meeting for
FREE via the Internet, click the link below to begin listening on your computer
--- http://www.trz.cc/fasb/live.html
Accountability rules exist in Europe, but
enforcement is weak (actually a joke in some instances)
American companies struggle to comply with the rules
imposed by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, some cast an envious look across the ocean,
where European companies face a far gentler set of rules. In fact, calling many
of them "rules" is deceptive. Such things as corporate disclosures about
executive compensation or the state of internal controls, or even the makeup of
boards, are typically governed by corporate codes that may be published by
regulators but for which compliance is voluntary.
Floyd Norris, "Corporate Rules in Europe Have Been Flexible, but Change Is
Coming," The New York Times, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/08/business/worldbusiness/08norris.html
Second Life is more than a
game
As a massively multiplayer online game, many people think of
Second Life
as little more than a virtual playground. But an increasing
number of people and organizations are employing the game in
applications that are useful for far more than
entertainment.
Second Life
was crafted as an open-ended environment that would allow
players to fly, drive fantastical vehicles, dress up in
outlandish outfits and build just about anything they could
imagine. The game's developers at San Francisco's
Linden Lab,
however, didn't expect it to be
used as a way for business
school students to test entrepreneurial talents or for
abused children to rediscover social skills.
Daniel Terdiman, "Second Life Teaches Life Lessons,"
Wired News, April 6, 2005 ---
http://www.wired.com/news/games/0,2101,67142,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_3
$500 million of his own money
In an interview, Case said he has committed $500
million of his own money to the venture, which he hopes will succeed at
refocusing the health care system so that it puts the interests of consumers
first. He said the enormous inefficiencies in health care became glaringly clear
to him through both personal experience -- as a patient, a parent and a sibling
-- and through talks with Sen. Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) and other experts.
David A. Vise, "Case Seeks Health Care Revolution AOL Ex-Chief Puts Up $500
Million in Venture," Washington Post, April 5, 2005; Page E01 ---
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A26671-2005Apr4.html
Kiss and Tell
The two greatest postwar American novelists -- Vladimir
Nabokov, a Russian exile, and Saul Bellow, a Montreal-born Jew -- were
intellectual outsiders. Both mainlined the European novel of ideas into the
veins of American literature and infused it with a coruscating, high-octane
style. Mr. Bellow's prose is energetic and torrential; his voice learned and
allusive. He thrived on chaos and loved contention, courted conflict and was
inspired by personal cataclysm. It's fascinating to see how Mr. Bellow, married
five times, sublimated his misery and portrayed his wives, from goddess to
bitch, before and after they divorced him.
Jeffry Meyers, "He Thrived on Chaos," The Wall Street Journal, April 7,
2005 ---
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,SB111283023742800223,00.html?mod=todays_us_personal_journal
Also see "Bellow's Gift" at
http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2005/04/07/mclemee
And from The New Yorker ---
http://www.newyorker.com/archive/content/articles/050411fr_archive02
Letters of a great scientist
The author and physicist in this case are one and the
same: Richard P. Feynman, the Nobel Prize laureate who, next to Albert Einstein,
is one of the world's most recognizable scientists and one of the few whose
written works have consistently made the best-seller lists. His memoirs of his
days with the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos and his lucid explanations of the
mysteries of quantum electrodynamics have long appealed to readers beyond the
pocket-protector set. But even Feynman's publisher, Basic Books, acknowledges
that it is taking a risk this month in publishing "Perfectly Reasonable
Deviations From the Beaten Track: The Letters of Richard P. Feynman," a
collection of previously uncirculated personal letters.
Edward Wyatt, "The Scientist Is Gone, but Not His Book Tour," The New York
Times, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/07/books/07feyn.html?
Higher Education and Trust
The American public understands that going to college helps individuals get
ahead. But what the public doesn’t understand is that colleges help society as a
whole, and that more people benefit than the graduates themselves. Convincing
the public of that broader social benefit is the goal of a major national
campaign that higher education leaders are planning. The Public Trust Initiative
will involve efforts in every state and with every sector of higher education.
The effort will feature both a national ad campaign and attempts to have
colleges shift some of their communications with their own constituencies —
students, parents, alumni, opinion leaders, taxpayers generally — away from
messages about individual institutions and toward messages about higher
education. he Public Trust
Scott Jaschik, "The Public Trust," Inside Higher Ed, April 7, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/07/trust
Bad tax advice comes with a price
Using civil injunctions and criminal indictments, the
IRS and the Justice Department have focused on simple scams in which tax
preparers have used fictitious deductions to get large refunds for clients, and
on more complex schemes in which tax advisers have promoted business and
charitable trusts to hide clients' income. From Oct. 1, 2001, to Sept. 31,
2004, the IRS says it began 689 criminal investigations of tax preparers. Grand
juries issued 291 indictments and prosecutors obtained 248 convictions during
that period, the IRS says. Since 2001, the Justice Department says it filed 129
civil cases seeking injunctions to stop tax preparers and scam promoters from
conducting business. Federal judges issued injunctions or other court orders in
102 of those cases.
Tony Loci, "Bad tax advice comes with a price ," USA Today, April 7, 2005
---
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20050407/a_taxpreparers07.art.htm
Beware of your tax
preparer: Just say no to loans based upon anticipated tax refunds
A refund-anticipation loan is a bank loan,
short-term borrowing based on the amount you expect from your
federal tax refund. It is also a popular marketing tool for the big
tax-preparation companies, appealing especially to people living
from paycheck to paycheck. In some limited circumstances,
refund-anticipation loans can be beneficial. But for most people,
"they're completely unnecessary, an extremely expensive drain on
expected refund money," said Jean Ann Fox, director of consumer
protection at the Consumer Federation of America. "It's money out
of the pockets of the working poor," Fox said. The federation and
the National Consumer Law Center have been leading the campaign
against refund-anticipation loans for several years, with some
success. Fees have dropped and disclosures have improved. But that
doesn't change the fact that these so-called instant refunds, with
interest rates to make usurers blush, are an expensive way to get
use of your own money for a few extra days.
Kevin G. Demarrais, "Quick cash back comes at a cost: Have a bit
of patience, and enjoy your whole tax refund," Houston Chronicle,
February 27, 2005 ---
http://www.chron.com/CDA/umstory.mpl/business/3058554
|
Bob Jensen's threads on taxation are at
http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#010304Taxation
Talentless
clones she claims have taken over Hollywood
No sooner had Our Nicole Kidman launched her latest
movie, The Interpreter, at the Sydney Opera House this week than her veteran
former co-star, Lauren Bacall, launched another attack on the anorexic
talentless clones she claims have taken over Hollywood. The 80-year-old Bacall
told British magazine Radio
"Hollywood puts on its best faces," Sydney Morning Herald, April 7, 2005
---
http://www.smh.com.au/text/articles/2005/04/06/1112489558995.html
TV audiences aren't interested in Miss
America's talent
Miss America has lost her TV show, and now has to
decide how much of her famous modesty she's willing to shed to get it back on
the air. Organizers of the pageant are considering a number of plans to
resuscitate the 85-year-old contest and bring it back to television this
September. The mildest plans include tweaking the broadcast program slightly by
eliminating the talent portion, which the ABC network had complained about
before dropping the show in the aftermath of last year's disappointing ratings.
Ivor Peterson, "A Challenge for Miss America in Reality TV Era," The New York
Times, April 9, 2005 --
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/09/nyregion/09pageant.html?
This one is at the end because the Larry
Summers debate is growing boring
Harvard University’s president gave a speech Thursday
night in which he endorsed and promoted much of the evidence about women and
science that was hurled at him after he spoke on the topic in January. An
account of last night’s talk in The Boston Globe said that he spoke at length
about the bias against women in science and the impact this has. “This has been,
as you can imagine, a period of substantial and intense immersion and education
for me on the topics I have just been discussing,” The Globe quoted him as
telling a group of students and professors. “I hope I have learned.”
Scott Jaschik, "The New Larry Summers on Women and Science," Inside Higher
Ed, April 8, 2005 ---
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/04/08/summers
Humor
Forwarded by Dick Haar
When Mozart passed away, he was buried in a churchyard. A couple days later,
the town drunk was walking through the cemetery and heard some strange noise
coming from the area where Mozart was buried. Terrified, the drunk ran and got
the priest to come and listen to it. The priest bent close to the grave and
heard some faint, unrecognizable music coming from the grave.
Frightened, the priest ran and got the town magistrate. When the magistrate
arrived, he bent his ear to the grave, listened for a moment, and said, "Ah,
yes, that's Mozart's Ninth Symphony, being played backwards."
He listened a while longer and said, "There's the Eighth Symphony, and it's
backwards, too. Most puzzling." So the magistrate kept listening. "There's the
Seventh...the Sixth...the Fifth...." Suddenly, the realization of what was
happening dawned on the magistrate; he stood up and announced to the crowd that
had gathered in the cemetery, "My fellow citizens, there's nothing to worry
about. It's just Mozart decomposing."
In my life, I thought I had a handle on the meaning of the word
"service." "The act of doing things for other people."
Then I heard the terms:
Internal Revenue Service Postal Service Telephone Service Civil Service
Selective Service City/County Public Service Customer Service Service Stations
And I became confused about the word "service." This is not what I
thought "service" meant.
Then today, I overheard two farmers talking and one of them mentioned that he
was having a bull over to "service" a few of his cows.
SHAZAM! It all came into perspective. Now I understand what all those
"service" agencies are doing to us.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Only one of these images of a penny is correct. Which one is it? ---
http://www.exploratorium.edu/exhibits/common_cents/index.html
Sure wish Erika could wake up like this
An older couple is lying in bed one morning, having just awakened from a good
night's sleep. He takes her hand and she responds, "Don't touch
me."
"Why not?" he asks.
She answers back, "Because I'm dead."
The husband says, "What are you talking about?
We're both lying here in bed together and talking to one another." She
says, "No, I'm definitely dead."
He insists, "You're not dead. What in the world makes you think you're
dead?"
"Because I woke up this morning and nothing hurts."
Forwarded by Auntie Bev
Here are the 10 first place winners in the International Pun Contest
1. A vulture boards an airplane, carrying two dead raccoons. The stewardess
looks at him and says, "I'm sorry, sir, only one carrion allowed per passenger."
2. Two fish swim into a concrete wall. The one turns to the other and says,"Dam"!
3. Two Eskimos sitting in a kayak were chilly, so they lit a fire in the
craft. Unsurprisingly it sank, proving once again that you can't have your kayak
and heat it too.
4. Two hydrogen atoms meet. One says "I've lost my electron." The other says
"Are you sure?" The first replies "Yes, I'm positive."
5. Did you hear about the Buddhist who refused Novocain during a root canal?
His goal: transcend dental medication.
6. A group of chess enthusiasts checked into a hotel and were standing in the
lobby discussing their recent tournament victories. After about an hour, the
manager came out of the office and asked them to disperse.
"But why?" they asked, as they moved off. "Because", he said, "I can't
stand chess-nuts boasting in an open foyer."
7. A woman has twins and gives them up for adoption. One of them goes to
a family in Egypt and is named "Ahmal." The other goes to a family in
Spain; they name him "Juan." Years later, Juan sends a picture of himself to
his birth mother. Upon receiving the picture, she tells her husband that
she wishes she also had a picture of Ahmal. Her husband responds,
"They're twins! If you've seen Juan, you've seen Ahmal."
8. These friars were behind on their belfry payments, so they opened up
a small florist shop to raise funds. Since everyone liked to buy flowers from
the men of God, a rival florist across town thought the competition was unfair.
He asked the good fathers to close down, but they would not. He went back and
begged the friars to close. They ignored him. So, the rival florist hired Hugh
MacTaggart, the roughest and most vicious thug in town to "persuade" them to
close. Hugh beat up the friars and trashed their store, saying he'd be back if
they didn't close up shop. Terrified, they did so, thereby proving that
only Hugh can prevent florist friars.
9. Mahatma Gandhi, as you know, walked barefoot most of the time,
which produced an impressive set of calluses on his feet. He also ate
very little, which made him rather frail and with his odd diet, he suffered from
bad breath. This made him (Oh, man, this is so bad, it's good)..... A super
calloused fragile mystic hexed by halitosis.
10. And finally, there was the person who sent ten different puns to
his friends, with the hope that at least one of the puns would make them laugh.
No pun in ten did????
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Six retired Floridians were playing poker in the condo clubhouse when
Meyerwitz loses $500 on a single hand, clutches his chest, and drops dead at the
table.
In a display of respect for their fallen comrade, the other five continue
playing standing up.
Finkelstein looks around and asks, "So, who's gonna tell his wife?" They cut
cards. Goldberg picks the two of clubs and has to carry the news.
They tell him to be discreet, be gentle, don't make a bad situation any
worse. "Discreet? I'm the most discreet person you'll ever meet. Discretion is
my middle name. Leave it to me."
Goldberg goes over to the Meyerwitz apartment and knocks on the door.
The wife answers thru the door and asks what he wants?
Goldberg declares "Your husband just lost $500 in a poker game and is afraid
to come home.
"Tell him to drop dead!" yells the wife.
"I'll go tell him." says Goldberg.
Forwarded by Dick Haar
Gushy but good.---
http://www.oldbluejacket.com/cowboys.htm
Forwarded by Debbie Bowling
Okay, some fun for us older folks and you younger ones too! The answers are
below, but don't cheat.
01.After the Lone Ranger saved the day and rode off into the sunset, the
grateful citizens would ask, "Who was that masked man?" Invariably, someone
would answer, "I don't know, but he left this behind." What did he leave
behind?_______________________
02.When the Beatles first came to the U.S. in early 1964, we all watched them
on the ______________________show.
03.Get your kicks, _______________
04.The story you are about to see is true. The names have been changed
___________
05. In the jungle, the mighty jungle,_________________________
06. After the twist, the mashed potato, and the watusi, we "danced" under a
stick that was lowered as low as we could go in a dance called
the_________________________
07. N_E_S_T_L_E_S, Nestle's makes the very best _______________
08. Satchmo was America's "ambassador of goodwill." Our parents shared this
great jazz trumpet player with us. His name was____________
09.What takes a licking and keeps on ticking?__________________
10.Red Skelton's hobo character was ________________________. and he always
ended his television show by saying, "Good night, and___________."
11.Some Americans who protested the Vietnam war did so by burning
their________________
12.The cute little car with the engine in the back and the trunk in the front
was called the VW. What other names did it go
by?____________________&_____________________
13. In 1971, singer Don MacLean sang a song about, "the day the music died."
This was a tribute to ___________________
14. We can remember the first satellite placed into orbit. The Russians did
it; it was called ______________
15. One of the big fads of the late 50's and 60's was a large plastic ring
that we twirled around our waist; it was called the ___________
Scroll down for the answers ......
=============================================================================
Answers:
01. The Lone Ranger left behind a silver bullet. (His horse named Silver less
something else behind.)
02. The Ed Sullivan show.
03. On Route 66
04. to protect the innocent.
05, The Lion sleeps tonight.
06. The limbo
07. chocolate.
08. Louis Armstrong
09. The Timex watch.
10. Freddy the freeloader, and "Good night, and may God Bless."
11. draft cards (the bra was also burned)
12. Beetle or Bug
13. Buddy Holly
14. sputnik
15. hula-hoop
The Stella Awards - Time once again to review the winners of the annual
Stella Awards. The Stellas are named after 81-year-old Stella Liebeck, who
spilled coffee on herself and successfully sued McDonald's. That case inspired
the Stella awards for the most frivolous successful lawsuits in the United
States.
Here are this year's winners (supposedly) ---
http://www.stellaawards.com/2004.html
#6: The Tribune Co. of Chicago, Ill. The newspaper chain owns several
newspapers, as well as the Chicago Cubs baseball team. One of its newspaper
carriers was Mark Guthrie, 43, of Connecticut. One of its ball players was Mark
Guthrie, 38, of Illinois. The company's payroll department mixed the two up,
putting the ballplayer's paycheck into the paper carrier's bank account. The
carrier allowed them to take back 90 percent of the improperly paid salary, and
said they could have the rest after they gave him a full accounting to ensure he
not only got his own pay, but wouldn't have any tax problems for being paid
$300,000(!) extra. The Tribune Co., rather than provide that reasonable
assurance, instead sued him for the rest of the money.
#5: "High Tech" retailer Sharper Image sells a lot of its "Ionic Breeze" air
filters. As part of a comparative review of many air filters, Consumer Reports
magazine found the "Ionic" unit was the worst performer. SI complained, saying
it didn't do a "fair" test. CU asked what sort of test should be done, but SI
never replied -- until it sued CU. A federal judge ruled the suit not only had
no merit, but was actually an illegal attempt to squelch public discussion. SI
was ordered to pay CU $400,000 to cover its legal defense costs.
#4: Edith Morgan, mother of Kansas City Chiefs football star Derrick Thomas,
who died after being thrown from his SUV in a crash while speeding in a
snowstorm. Morgan said Thomas's neck was broken because the SUV's roof collapsed
a few inches -- not from rolling down the highway because he wasn't wearing a
seatbelt -- and sued General Motors. Her lawyer begged jurors to award more than
$100 million in damages, perhaps more -- he "did not want to put an upper limit
on it." GM pointed out that Thomas's oversize SUV was exempt from federal roof
crush standards, yet it met them anyway. The jury sent a message: of that $100
million, it awarded Morgan ...nothing.
#3: Tanisha Torres of Wyndanch, N.Y. The woman sued Radio Shack for
misspelling her town as "Crimedanch" on her cell phone bill. She didn't even ask
them to change it; she just sued. "I'm not a criminal," she whined. "My son
plays on the high school football team." Yeah, that makes sense. The name "Crimedanch"
is a common joke; police in the area confirm it's a high-crime area. Still,
Torres claimed she suffered "outrage" and "embarrassment" at having to see that
spelling on her private phone bill. The suit seeks unspecified damages.
#2: Homecomings Financial, a subsidiary of GMAC Financial Services, which is
a division of General Motors. The finance company accepted a change of address
notice from identity thieves for the account belonging to Robert and Suzanne
Korinke. The thieves ran up a $142,000 debt, and the Korinkes notified
Homecomings of the fraud the moment they discovered it. Homecomings sued them
two years later, saying the couple's "negligence" is what "caused the injury to
Homecomings," not the fact that the company accepted a change of address from
fraudsters -- and then gave them all the money they could drain. The victims got
the company to drop the suit, which demanded $74,000 plus attorney's fees, after
shelling out $5,000 in legal fees -- an outcome the couple's lawyer called
"really lucky".
And the winner of the 2004 True Stella Award: Mary Ubaudi of Madison County,
Ill. Ubaudi was a passenger in a car that got into a wreck. She put most of the
blame on the deepest pocket available: Mazda Motors, who made the car she was
riding in. Ubaudi demands "in excess of $150,000" from the automaker, claiming
it "failed to provide instructions regarding the safe and proper use of a
seatbelt." One hopes Mazda's attorneys make her swear in court that she has
never before worn a seatbelt, has never flown on an airliner, and that she's too
stupid to figure out how to fasten a seatbelt.
I haven't verified these cases but it would be amazing if they are true!
A city boy, Kenny, moved to the country and
bought a donkey from an old farmer for $100.00. The farmer agreed to deliver the
donkey the next day. The next day the farmer drove up and said, "Sorry son, but
I have some bad news, the donkey died."
Kenny replied "Well then, just give me my money
back."
The farmer said, "Can't do that. I went and
spent it already."
Kenny said, "OK then, just unload the donkey."
The farmer asked, "What ya gonna do with him?"
Kenny: "I'm going to raffle him off." Farmer:
"You can't raffle off a dead donkey!"
Kenny: "Sure I can. Watch me. I just won't tell
anybody he is dead."
A month later the farmer met up with Kenny and
asked, "What happened with that dead donkey?"
Kenny: "I raffled him off. I sold 500 tickets at
two dollars a piece and made a profit of $898.00."
Farmer: "Didn't anyone complain?"
Kenny: "Just the guy who won. So I gave him his
two dollars back." - Kenny grew up and eventually became the chairman of Enron
Forwarded by Paula
Two little old ladies were attending a rather long church service. One leaned
over and whispered, "My butt is going to sleep." "I know," replied her
companion, "I heard it snore three times."
Actual 911 conversation, The Opinion Journal, March 31, 2005
Caller: I ordered my food three times. They're mopping the floor inside, and
I understand they're busy. They're not even busy, OK, I've been the only car
here. I asked them four different times to make me a Western Barbecue Burger.
OK, they keep giving me a hamburger with lettuce, tomato and cheese, onions. And
I said, I am not leaving.
Dispatcher: Uh-huh.
Caller: I want a Western Burger. Because I just got my kids from tae kwon do;
they're hungry. I'm on my way home, and I live in San Clemente.
Dispatcher: Uh-huh.
Caller: OK, she gave me another hamburger. It's wrong. I said four times, I
said, "I want it." She goes, "Can you go out and park in front?" I said, "No. I
want my hamburger right." So then the lady came to the manager, or whoever she
is--she came up and she said, um, "Did you want your money back?" And I said,
"No. I want my hamburger. My kids are hungry, and I have to jump on the toll
freeway [sic]." I said, "I am not leaving this spot," and I said I will call the
police, because I want my Western Burger done right. Now is that so hard?
Dispatcher: OK, what exactly is it you want us to do for you?
Caller: Send an officer down here. I want them to make me the right--
Dispatcher: Ma'am, we're not going to go down there and enforce your Western
Bacon Cheeseburger.
Caller: What am I supposed to do?
Jensen Question
What do you suggest for this poor woman when law enforcement fails her?
Forwarded by Aaron Konstam
* Vanity license plate seen on a California car:.. WAS HIS
* Wealthy folks miss one of life's greatest thrills: making that last car
payment!
* You heard about the new Govt. bonds? The new Newt Gingrich bond has no
maturity, The Dole bond has no interest, and the Clinton bond has no principle.
* If I save the whales, where do I keep them?
* In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: IT GOES ON.
* If you can't keep a secret, then you don't need to know it.
* When your dreams turn to dust, then it's time to vacuum.
* If you want the world to beat a path to your door try taking a nap on a
Saturday afternoon.
* Quote from the boss: "I didn't say it was your fault. I said I was going to
blame it on you."
* I thought I'd try Computer Dating. Tomorrow night I'm meeting someone named
Packard Bell.
* My son told his teacher he didn't understand how the Indians served popcorn
to the Pilgrims on the first Thanksgiving when they didn't have microwaves back
then.
* Why hate yourself in the morning? Sleep till noon.
* When computer cryptography is outlawed, bay! bhgynfrt jywq odrt.
* I need someone to refresh my memory. How many cars are allowed through an
intersection after the light turns red? Is it 3 or 5?
* What did the instructor at the school for suicidal terrorists say to his
students? "Watch closely. I'm only going to do this once!"
* Sometimes the garbage disposal Gods demand the offering of a spoon.
* You think your high school was tough? My high school was so tough that when
the teacher asked, "What comes at the end of a sentence?" three guys said, "You
appeal."
* How can we have a National Debt AND a budget surplus? If my plastic money
is maxed out at $10,000, that $100 in my wallet can hardly be considered a
surplus.
* If idiots could fly, this place would be an airport.
Forwarded by Paula
Sven and Ole, hunters from North Dakota, got a pilot to fly them to Canada to
hunt moose. They bagged six. As they started loading the plane for the return
trip, the pilot said that the plane could take only four moose.
The two lads objected strongly. "Last year ve shot six and the pilot let us
put dem all on board; he had de same plane as yours."
Reluctantly, the pilot gave in and all six were loaded. However, even on full
power, the little plane couldn't handle the load and went down a few moments
after take-off.
Climbing out of the wreck Sven asked Ole, "Any idea vere ve are?"
"Ya!.... I tink ve're pretty close ta vhere ve crashed last year."
Forwarded by Barb Hessel
Brand New 2005 Edition Of "You Know You're A
Redneck When..."
1. You take your dog for a walk and you both use
the same tree.
2. You can entertain yourself for more than 15
minutes with a fly swatter.
3. Your boat has not left the driveway in 15
years.
4. You burn your yard rather than mow it.
5. You think the "Nutcracker" is something you
do off the high dive.
6. The Salvation Army declines your furniture.
7. You offer to give someone the shirt off your
back and they don't want it.
8. You have the local taxidermist on speed dial.
9. You come back from the dump with more than
you took there.
10. You keep a can of Raid on the kitchen table.
11. Your wife can climb a tree faster than your
cat.
12. Your grandmother has "ammo" on her Christmas
list.
13. You keep flea and tick soap in the shower.
14. You've been involved in a custody fight over
a hunting dog.
15. You go to the stock car races and don't need
a program! .
16. You know how many bales of hay your car will
hold.
17. You have a rag for a gas cap.
18. Your house doesn't have curtains, but ! your
truck does.
19. You wonder how service stations keep their
restrooms so clean.
20. You can spit without opening your mouth.
21. You consider your license plate as
personalized because your father made it.
22. Your lifetime ! goal is to own a fireworks
stand.
23. You have a complete set of salad bowls and
they all say "Cool Whip" on the side.
24. The biggest city you've ever been to is
WalMart.
25. Your working TV sits on top of your
non-working TV.
26. You've used your ironing board as a buffet
table.
27. A tornado hits your neighborhood and does a
$100,000.00 worth of improvements.
28. You use a toilet brush to scratch your back.
29. You missed your 5th grade graduation because
you were on jury duty
30. You think fast food is hit! ting a deer at
65 mph.
And Last, But Not Least...
31. Someone tells you that you've got something
in your teeth, so you take them out to see what it is!
Four men were bragging how
smart their cats were. The first man was an
engineer, the second an accountant, the third a chemist and the fourth was
a lawyer.
To show off, the engineer called to his cat, "T-Square, do your stuff."
T-Square pranced over to the desk, took out some paper and a pen and
promptly drew a circle, a square and a triangle. Everyone agreed that was
pretty smart.
The accountant said his cat could do better. He called his cat and said,
"Spreadsheet, do your stuff." Spreadsheet went into the kitchen and
returned with a dozen Tim Tams, he divided the into four equal piles of
three each. Everybody agreed that was good.
The chemist said his cat could do better. He called his cat and said,
"Measure, do your stuff." Measure got up, walked over to the fridge, took
out a litre of milk, got a 250ml glass from the cupboard and measured out
200mls without spilling a drop. Everyone agreed that was good.
Then the three men turned to the lawyer and said, "What can your
cat do?" The lawyer called to his cat and said, "Sueemm, do
your stuff." Sueemm jumped to his feet, ate the Tim Tams, drank the
milk, pissed on the paper, sexually assaulted the other three cats,
claimed
he injured his back while
doing so, filed a provisional improvement notice
for unsafe working conditions, put in a claim for workers compensation,
and went
home for the rest of the day on sick leave.
Click on the pig whenever you are stressed!
http://members.cox.net/ladysarakat/piggy.swf
And that's the way it was on April 12, 2005 with a little help from
my friends.
Facts about the earth in real time --- http://www.worldometers.info/
Jesse's Wonderful Music for Romantics (You have to scroll down to the
titles) --- http://www.jessiesweb.com/
Free Harvard Classics --- http://www.bartleby.com/hc/
Free Education and Research
Videos from Harvard University --- http://athome.harvard.edu/archive/archive.asp
I highly recommend TheFinanceProfessor (an absolutely fabulous and
totally free newsletter from a very smart finance professor, Jim Mahar from
St. Bonaventure University) --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/
Bob Jensen's bookmarks for accounting newsletters are at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob1.htm#News
News Headlines for Accounting from TheCycles.com --- http://www.thecycles.com/business/accounting
An
unbelievable number of other news headlines categories in TheCycles.com are at
http://www.thecycles.com/
Jack Anderson's Accounting Information Finder --- http://www.umsl.edu/~anderson/accsites.htm
Gerald Trite's great set of links --- http://www.zorba.ca/bookmark.htm
Paul Pacter maintains the best international accounting standards and
news Website at http://www.iasplus.com/
The Finance Professor --- http://www.financeprofessor.com/about/aboutFP.html
Walt Mossberg's many answers to questions in technology --- http://ptech.wsj.com/
How stuff works --- http://www.howstuffworks.com/
Household and Other Heloise-Style Hints --- http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/bookbob3.htm#Hints
Bob Jensen's video helpers for MS Excel, MS Access, and other helper
videos are at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~rjensen/video/
Accompanying
documentation can be found at http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/default1.htm and http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen/HelpersVideos.htm
Click on www.syllabus.com/radio/index.asp for a complete
list of interviews with established leaders, creative thinkers and education
technology experts in higher education from around the country.
Professor Robert E. Jensen (Bob) http://www.trinity.edu/rjensen
Jesse
H. Jones Distinguished Professor of Business Administration
Trinity
University, San Antonio, TX 78212-7200
Voice: 210-999-7347 Fax:
210-999-8134 Email: rjensen@trinity.edu