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Let's Welcome This Very Funny Comedic Genius Into Our Area! It's Time to 'Demand' Dave Chappelle!

Upcoming Movie Trailers 2012




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Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label employment. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Egyptians Head to Polls in Historic Vote



California Man Commits Suicide Before Foreclosure



Eugene Polley, inventor of TV remote, dies at 96


This undated photo provided by LG Electronics shows engineer Eugene Polley. A spokesman for Zenith Electronics says Polley, the inventor of the "Flash-Matic," the first wireless TV remote control, died Sunday, May 20, 2012, of natural causes in Downers Grove, Ill. He was 96. Polley and fellow Zenith engineer Robert Adler were honored in 1997 with Emmys for their work in pioneering TV remotes.
(Credit: AP Photo/LG Electronics)

Do 'Zero Tolerance' School Discipline Policies Go Too Far?

 

Employment Blog Network

Friday, May 11, 2012

Jobs Now in U.S., Canada, and U.K.: Find or Post a Job




Time magazine cover: What’s it trying to do?

Time cover of Jamie Lynne Grumet, 26, breastfeeding her three-year-old son has raised eyebrows.







More than 200,000 long-term jobless Americans will lose their unemployment checks this week, when eight states roll off the federal extended benefits program.

Nearly half of them live in California, and the rest reside in Florida, Illinois, North Carolina, Colorado, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Texas.

Starting later this year, the maximum number of weeks the jobless can collect unemployment benefits will be reduced to as little as 40 weeks in states with jobless rates below 6% and to as many as 73 weeks where unemployment tops 9%. 


Some Non-Pill Contraceptives Have Blood Clot Risks

Women using hormone-releasing skin patches, implants, vaginal rings were more likely to develop clots, study finds

Saturday, April 28, 2012

College-Free Tuition: Oh Happy Days!

Tuition-Free Colleges

Students and parents obsessing over how they are going to pay for college might want to consider one of higher education's greatest secrets: tuition-free colleges. Although these schools are few and far between, they remain an attractive option for students looking to walk away from college debt-free. Most were founded nearly a century ago and are able to offer students zero tuition because of hefty endowments and magnanimous donors.

These colleges range from liberal arts schools to ones that specialize in engineering, art, and music. Some come with unusual work-study requirements—such as requiring students to put in time on the school's dairy farm—or mandatory campus activities. Students who attend these schools can save as much as $32,000 or more in tuition each year, savings that can add up to more than $120,000 over a four-year period. Not surprisingly, some of these schools are among the most competitive to get into in the U.S.

Employment Blog Network



Monday, April 23, 2012

Looking For Work? Several Job Fairs Scheduled This Week

If you’re looking for a job, there are plenty of opportunities to apply this week.

At least five job fairs will be held.  Open positions range anywhere from office work to warehouse labor.

Quality Control and Assemblers and Material Handlers

SC Works of Greer is hosting RL Enterprise & Associates Tuesday.  They will be interviewing for temp and temp-to-hire quality control positions with client employers in the Duncan and Spartanburg areas.  They are also accepting applications for assemblers and material handlers in Easley.  The job fair takes place April 24 from 9 to 11 a.m. at the SC Works Greer office on North Main Street.  Organizers ask that you bring your resume and references.

Temporary Office Support

SC Works of Greenville is hosting a job fair for Bi-Lo, Inc. Tuesday.  Organizers are looking to fill temporary office support positions.

If you are interested, go to the SC works Center-McAlister Square on South Pleasantburg Drive April 24 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.  Bring your resume and be prepared for a pre-screening interview.

Wide Variety Of JobsUp to 250 new positions are now open in the Upstate.  Marketplace Staffing is holding a job fair Wednesday.  Organizers are looking to hire entry level and experienced positions.

The staffing and human capital solutions firm says the jobs include assembly, packers, warehouse support, material handlers, forklift operators, machine operators, general labor, maintenance technicians, and CNC machinists.  The positions are located across the Upstate including Clinton, Fountain Inn, Laurens, Greenville and Spartanburg and will be on all shifts.

Applications will be accepted for all positions between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. at the Hampton Inn in Clinton, on E. Corporate Center Drive.

Follow-up interviews will be scheduled soon after.

Distribution and Warehouse

SC Works Spartanburg and Phillips Staffing are teaming up to hold a job fair Friday.  Organizers say they are looking to hire for several positions including pickers, packers, forklift driver, shipping/receiving associates, material handlers, inspection associates, assembly associates, and inventory control associates.

Applicants must be 18-years-old and have six months experience in distribution or warehouse work and have a high school diploma or equivalent.

If you are interested, the job fair will be held April 27 between 10:30 a.m. and noon at the Spartanburg SC Works office.

Job Placement
Jobs are available immediately through ResCare, an employer that helps needy families and puts welfare recipients back to work.

Organizers say there are jobs open in several different areas across the state.

You can see all of the jobs posted and apply online by clicking here.

Those selected will start a two-phase training period.

16 Facts About Walmart That Will Blow Your Mind

How This Little Kid Became The Hottest Entrepreneur In America

Foods that Whiten Teeth

A surprising number of foods in your fridge can counteract dental dinginess and actually whiten your teeth.


How To Look Good Using Food Stamps: Beautify Yourself with the Foods You Buy at the Market

A lot of the foods you buy at the market using your food stamps (EBT card) can also be used for external health benefits, such as your face, hair, teeth, and more.  Learn more about how basic condiments and spices are very useful to be used to achieve both internal and external beauty saving you money and time.   

Saturday, April 21, 2012

"Why the Hell Not" Saturday News Segment 

Let's face it: The majority of the news we read about, or hear about, may or may not have an impact in our lives.  We can either learn from it, or not.  Whichever decision you choose to make, it is your decision to make it work for you, or not.  With that said, the following article headlines just may help you in some kind of way in your life.  

I like to think that whatever I put onto this blog will help you, the readers, in some form of fashion.  What may work for you, may not work for someone else.  And what may work for someone else, may not work for you.  


It has been my many years of experience that most folks do not like to share information with others to help them improve themselves, and/or their families.  Unless you attend the same place of worship, or you're an associated member of an [or any] organization, or a family member, friend, neighbor, or simply in a 'clique' (i.e., fraternity, sorority, lodge, etc.), the chances of anyone else learning about something is nil!

Jesus the Christ spread his words for all to hear and use to improve their quality of life, and not to oppress anyone from using his words!

Too often, we second guess ourselves whenever we are deciding about something, or someone.  Should we, or shouldn't we.  You know what I mean . . . the usual "Could of, Would of, Should of" syndrome.  

But in the end, most of us who don't mind sharing invaluable information to others, so that they, too, can benefit from it, just say "Why the Hell Not?!?"  

It's time to 'Break the Pavement of Enslavement' mentality in the 21st Century!


Enjoy your Saturday, and the entire weekend! 

Tips for Cleaning Using Vodka



Greenville, SC Staffing & Recruiting



How to Plant and Grow Sweet Potatoes



MAU Workforce Solutions



Top U.S. colleges to offer free classes online


Coursera

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News You May Have Missed

If You're Stricken, Minutes Matter, Yet Many Ignore Signs, Delay Treatment


The True Meaning of Education



More workers work through lunch or eat at their desks



Homeschooling: Why More Black Families Are Leaving Public Schools



What You Lose When You Sign That Donor Card

Giving away your organs sounds noble, but have doctors blurred the line between life and death?



Home Depot to hire 70K workers for spring

Home Depot will hire 70,000 seasonal workers for spring season, even with last year

 

Saturday, April 7, 2012

New Details Emerge over Police Fatal Shooting of Elderly Ex-Marine Kenneth Chamberlain, Sr.

Democracy Now! co-host Juan Gonzalez has obtained a photograph of White Plains Police Officer Anthony Carelli, the officer alleged to have fired the two shots that killed Kenneth Chamberlain, Sr., the 68-year-old former Marine whose medical alert button accidentally summoned police to his apartment last November. The police union has blasted the release of the officer’s name, saying he deserves the right to a fair and impartial inquiry. Chamberlain’s son said he agrees, but notes that the White Plains police failed to grant his father the same opportunity. [includes rush transcript]


UFO Encounter Revealed After Almost 40 Years By Ex-Military Pilot: Exclusive


Huge Martian Dust Devil Churns in New Photo



See the Elephant Face on Mars



EXCLUSIVE: Dolly Parton devastated hearing 'I Will Always Love You' played at Whitney Houston's funeral



Healthiest Plants for Your Home




Class photo called ‘offensive’ and ‘degrading’




Growth of Suburbs Falls To Historic Low



Eight Queens schools slated for closure gear up for last stand 




What Does the JOBS Act Do?



Employment Blog Network



Looking For Employment?



Monday, January 2, 2012

Happy Bless New Year To All of You!

written by Miriam G. Aw

It's now Year 2012, a number #5 year that depicts freedom of movement, partaking in joyful events, exercising patience by avoiding hasty and impulsive use of words and actions, but equally important, this is the year to think and act "outside-the box" when it comes to seeking employment, starting a business, or revamping your existing business model in order to generate lucrative income!

Granted, most folks will read this and believe that what I say has no validity, nor reason, due to the many decades of hype portrayed in mainstream media that seemingly dictates what you should, or should not do based on what so-called experts in their field of expertise have to say about what to wear, eat, or relationships, just to mention a few.

For far too long, our society have been duped into believing mainstream media reports about the economy, and how it continues to either decline, or rebound, despite what we think or believe what's really going on - especially since it is us who are feeling the brunt of the country's economic woes.

There are statistics being thrown at us left and right with adamant tones that are design to make us believe that whatever is being said regarding anything that affect us, as a whole, should be taken as 'gospel.'  But you and I know that we need to have honesty in reporting.  

How many times have you learned about pertinent information that is beneficial for us to know at a later time when such information was available for us to get at an earlier time?  Especially when such information was already revealed by a so-called friend, relative, congregant member, neighbor, etc., but somehow you got it through 'the grapevine.'  

If no one else told you, please allow me to share with you on what I've been observing for at least 7 to 10 years, and what I've just learned about last week.  

If you are seeking employment, or if you are interested in attending medical school, for example, it will behoove you to check outside the U.S.A., for employment and/or schooling.

Yes, the opportunities of employment and schooling are out there for you to partake in, whether you are single or married with, or without children!

Last Monday (day after Christmas), I met a nice young man in the hospital emergency room.  My husband took ill, and this lovely fella took my husband's EKG.  As always, and at the risk of sounding bias because I love seeing young people, especially young black males, working in the medical profession in any capacity, I asked him which school did he graduate from, and whether if he aspired to go higher in the medical profession.

Come to find out that this young man, whose name is Germaine, attended and graduated from South Carolina State University, which is located in Orangeburg, S.C., and he further his education in Aruba!  Yes child, Aruba!  Well, I was taken back a bit when he went on more about how much he learned, and that there myriad of schools that provide great education, but only if you are up to the task of really wanting to learn without being spoon-fed everything like some spoil rich kid!

In other words, you have to work for what you want, and ask questions if you don't know the answers by using your God-given common sense.  And besides, who cannot learn anything in an environment that provides great weather every step of the way?!?

Out of curiosity, I asked him if he happen to convince, or at best, inform other youngsters who are in his peer group about attending medical school, or any other type of school in Aruba, or in any other part of the Caribbean, and much to my surprise, his answer astounded me, to say the least.

He stated that the majority of the people whom he shared his information with did not express any interest of doing the same, yet they continue to struggle with schools that they are unhappy with as a result of their teachers not giving enough 'instruction' on their class courses, and their extreme displeasure on the cost of books needed for their courses.

Unfortunately, paying through the nose for college books is a normal complaint.  And if you are receiving a grant, most of your grant money goes to paying for the books and tuition, thus leaving practically nothing else for the remaining semester to use for much needed things (i.e., food, gas, apartment, etc.).

Although I cannot provide hard evidence of statistical data for your reading pleasure, I assure you that what I say here is a national problem . . . well, at least that is the problem here in the State of South Carolina.

Personally, it would behoove every young male and female to get their four-year degree at their local, regional, or national college/university, and then further their field of interest in the Caribbean, or some other country that offers superlative education.  There are a host of great schools that offer a lot giving more bang to your buck.  After all, this is a GLOBAL world, and no longer can any of us afford to remain isolated, or ignorant, to facts.

In fact, you can learn a lot about other countries, and what they can offer you by watching one of my favorite programs "House Hunter International," which is a HGTV program (Channel 229 on Directv).  On this program, you will see how so many Americans left their home state, and home town, to live abroad to become gainfully employed, and/or attend school.  


Also, Google Search "Caribbean Medical Schools," where you will find a list of schools in this part of the world.  You must do your research.  No one else can do it for you.  Take the initiative, and start anew, or renew what you already know.


And if you decide that leaving the States is not your cup-of-tea, then you prepare yourself to undergo a major overhaul in your priorities regarding employment, school, money, family, comfortability, and so forth, that will allow you the freedom to enjoy life the way you want it.


With that said, may you have a Happy Bless New Year 2012, and may all of you aspirations are fulfilled, and your dreams realized with good spirits.

Peace & Blessings,

Miriam
BCD21CGN 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Wealth Gap Between Oldest And Youngest Is Widest Ever

WASHINGTON — The wealth gap between younger and older Americans has stretched to the widest on record, worsened by a prolonged economic downturn that has wiped out job opportunities for young adults and saddled them with housing and college debt.

The typical U.S. household headed by a person age 65 or older has a net worth 47 times greater than a household headed by someone under 35, according to an analysis of census data released Monday.

While people typically accumulate assets as they age, this wealth gap is now more than double what it was in 2005 and nearly five times the 10-to-1 disparity a quarter-century ago, after adjusting for inflation.

Black, Asian Teens Have Lowest Rates Of Drug And Alcohol Use

Nov. 7 — Black and Asian teenagers in the U.S. are less likely to use alcohol or drugs than adolescents of other races, a study found.


The survey of 72,561 teens found that American Indian youth had the highest level of drug or alcohol use, with 48 percent reporting they had used the substances in the past year. That was followed by 39 percent of whites, 37 percent of Hispanics, 36 percent mixed-race teens, 32 percent of blacks and 24 percent of Asians, according to the research published today in Archives of General Psychiatry.

Wireless Service Taxes Hit D.C., Maryland The Hardest

Did you know: Maryland (11th) and the District of Columbia (15th) are among the top 20 states with the most expensive wireless services?

A special report released by Tax Analysts, a non-profit provider of tax news and analysis, offers a detailed picture of the problem. If you live in Maryland, the combined federal-state local tax rate on your wireless services is 17.28% – and in D.C. the combined rate is 16.63% (as of July 2010). Wireless taxes in Maryland are about 6.3% higher than the national average and in D.C. about 2.3% higher.

Police Beat Teenage Black Girl For Riding Bike




A Majority Of Black Jobless No Longer Receiving Unemployment

A majority of Black unemployed are no longer receiving unemployment benefits.
In early 2010, 75 percent of Black unemployed were receiving benefits. Now, only 48 percent receive unemployment, a shift that highlights the nation’s issues with long tern unemployment.

Supreme Court to look at life in prison for juveniles

The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide whether juveniles convicted of killing someone may be locked up for life with no chance of parole, a follow-up to last year's ruling barring such sentences for teenagers whose crimes do not include killing.

The justices will examine a pair of cases from the South involving young killers who are serving life sentences for crimes they committed when they were 14.

Both cases were brought by the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala. The institute said that life without parole for children so young "is cruel and unusual" and violates the Constitution.

The group says roughly six dozen people in 18 states are under life sentences and ineligible for parole for crimes they committed at 13 or 14.

Who Killed Biggie Smalls?

A retired LAPD detective who worked on the case says he knows.

Investigations into the shocking murders of hip-hop stars Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls was shelved prematurely, according to a retired LAPD detective who said he knows who is responsible.

His new book "Murder Rap" points the finger at hip-hop mogul Suge Knight as responsible for ordering the hit on Christopher Wallace, better known as Biggie Smalls.

"This is the definitive account," said author and retired LAPD detective Greg Kading. "I think that right now is the time when this should be looked at to promote prosecution"

Kading retired in 2010 to write the book.

"At the time, I realized these cases were both shelved, and there was no proactive effort to solve them," Kading said.

A Bright Economic Outlook: Kool Smiles Plans to Hire Nearly 100 South Carolina Residents in the Next 12 Months

Increased Patient Demand Fueling Expansion Plans for Leading Dental Health Provider


– While the monthly news from the Bureau of Labor and Statistics reports slow – if any – job growth, Kool Smiles is pleased to announce plans to hire nearly 100 new employees for its South Carolina offices within the next 12 months. A leading
dental health provider for children and adults, Kool Smiles has seen an increase in patients through positive patient referrals and will continue to expand to meet the growing demand.

FBI Joins Search for Missing 2-Year-old Washington Boy

The FBI has joined the search for a 2-year-old Washington state boy who was last seen by his mother inside a parked car.

Sky Metalwala was reported missing Sunday morning after his mother discovered him missing from her car in Bellevue, Wash.

The child's mother, Julia Biryukova, told police that she had run out of gas and left the boy buckled into his car seat while she and her 4-year-old daughter walked to a Chevron gas station, about a mile away.

Conrad Murray guilty in death of Michael Jackson

Cardiologist Conrad Murray has been convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the drug-overdose death of Michael Jackson. Prosecutors accused him of administering a fatal dose of the powerful anesthetic propofol to the King of Pop.

The judge ordered Murray held without bail until sentencing Nov. 29.

D.A.: Conrad Murray unlikely to serve 'appropriate' sentence

It is unlikely that Dr. Conrad Murray will serve a lengthy stint behind bars, L.A. County Dist. Atty. Steve Cooley said Monday after the physician’s conviction in the death of Michael Jackson.

Cooley said legislation that calls for some state prison inmates to be returned to county jails will probably mean that Murray -– who was handcuffed and taken into custody after his conviction -– will probably not serve “an appropriate sentence.”

Murray faces a maximum term of four years in prison when he is sentenced Nov. 29.

SC's new voter ID law could hit GOP seniors

South Carolina's new voter ID law could affect an unlikely group: older white voters who have higher incomes, are reliably Republican and live in retirement homes and gated golf communities along the state's southern coast, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.

There are roughly 217,000 active voters in the state who do not have a driver's license or state ID card, election officials said. Of those, almost a third are 65 or older, and nearly 1,600 of them live in precincts in Beaufort County's Sun City retirement community or affluent neighborhoods nearby, according to AP's analysis.

The Corporate Welfare State

The Occupy Wall Street protesters aren't good at articulating what they want, but one of their demands is "end corporate welfare." Well, welcome aboard. Some of us have been fighting crony capitalism for decades, and it's good to have new allies if liberals have awakened to the dangers of the corporate welfare state.

Corporate welfare is the offer of special favors—cash grants, loans, guarantees, bailouts and special tax breaks—to specific industries or firms. The government doesn't track the overall cost of these programs, but in 2008 the Cato Institute made an attempt and came up with $92 billion for fiscal 2006, which is more than the U.S. government spends on homeland security.

New census measure shows aid programs are helping poor children

A new, more accurate way of measuring poverty shows that antipoverty programs are working to keep children from falling into absolute deprivation.

The U.S. Census Bureau released a supplemental poverty measure Monday that shows children's poverty is at lower levels than previously calculated, thanks to food stamps and other programs aimed at helping families survive.

"It looks like the programs are targeted well at families with children, bringing many up out of poverty," said Kathleen Short, the Census Bureau economist who wrote the report.

At the same time, the report shows that the number of elderly living in poverty is much higher than previously calculated.

49.1 million people are poor, new Census estimates show

The ranks of America's poor are greater than previously known, reaching a new level of 49.1 million — or 16%— due to rising medical costs and other expenses that make it harder for people to stay afloat, according to new Census estimates.

Based on the revised formula, the number of poor people exceeds the record 46.2 million, or 15.1%, that was officially reported in September.

Banning Sodas At School Not Enough, Say Experts

Although children are not buying sugary drinks at school because of state bans, their overall consumption of such beverages does not seem to have dropped, researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago reported in Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine after carrying out a study involving nearly seven thousand pupils in 40 US states.

Emergency warning test coming to every radio and TV in the nation

This is only a test. Seriously.


That's what the Federal Emergency Management Agency wants the public to know about the first nationwide test of the emergency alert system, scheduled for Wednesday.


The decades-old warning system is often tested locally, but it’s never been tested on every radio and TV station in the country at the same time, according to FEMA.


The agency is trying to get the word out about the test to avoid unnecessary alarm like, say, the panic caused by Orson Welles’ 1938 radio broadcast of a fictional Martian invasion in New Jersey.

Officials also want to prevent the test from tying up 911 phone lines.


"We have alerted our 911 call centers about the possibility for increased call volume during the Nov. 9 test,'' Alisa Simmons, a spokeswoman for the 911 network in Tarrant County, Texas, said in a statement appealing to the public not to call to inquire about the exercise.


Wednesday's 30-second test, which will sound and look like the familiar local tests, will begin at 2 p.m. EST (11 a.m. PST). Some 30,000 radio and TV operations will participate in the test.


Federal officials considered a three-minute test but decided on 30 seconds "to reduce any potential disruptions to the American people, while still maintaining our ability to test the system's nationwide capabilities," said FEMA spokeswoman Rachel Racusen.

Woods: Williams apologized over racial slur

Tiger Woods says he has received an apology from former caddie Steve Williams over a racial slur, and the two met and shook hands Tuesday at The Lakes Golf Club ahead of the Australian Open.

At a caddies' awards party last week, Williams talked about a television interview he gave following his new employer Adam Scott's win at the Bridgestone Invitational, saying "it was my aim to shove it up that black a---."

Woods said Tuesday the comment "was hurtful ... the wrong thing to say, and something that he has acknowledged. Stevie is not racist."

Global Voices is an international community of bloggers who report on blogs and citizen media from around the world.
Live in South Carolina?  Read "Breaking the Pavement of Enslavement!"

Thursday, September 15, 2011

101-Year-Old Woman Evicted From Home In Detroit

A 101-year-old woman was evicted from the southwest Detroit home where she lived for nearly six decades after her 65-year-old son failed to pay the mortgage.

Texana Hollis was evicted Monday and her belongings were placed outside the home. Her son, Warren Hollis, said he didn’t pay the bill for several years and disregarded eviction notices.

“I kept it from her because I didn’t want to worry her,” Warren Hollis told WXYZ-TV for a report that aired Monday night. “I was just so sure it wasn’t going to happen.”

Wayne County Chief Deputy Treasurer David Szymanski told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the Hollises took out an adjustable-rate mortgage in 2002. A default and foreclosure notice was filed in November.

“They ended up owing $80,000 on the home,” Szymanski said. “Warren indicates he did not make the payments. He got the notices, but threw them away.”

County records show that property taxes were paid on the home through summer 2010. A winter tax bill of $55.95, including interest and fees, was unpaid, and a $778.44 summer tax bill was due this month

Job seekers, get ready for personality tests

More employers are using pre-hire assessments

As it turns out, your childhood misdeeds, along with whether you care about someone else’s bad day and how much you read, may have an impact on how a prospective employer views you.
To get a read on applicants, more employers are using pre-hire assessments, which can check personality, cognitive ability, and competency, among other areas. About 56% of companies are using some sort of assessment tool as part of the hiring process this year, up from 48% in 2010, according to Aberdeen Group, a Boston-based research firm. 


Facebook Organizes Friends into Lists Automatically

According to information posted to the Facebook blog , the new friends list feature – labeled Smart Lists – will automatically create groups for users' friends based on things they have in common: Workplace, school, city or family.
Additionally, users will be able to create lists for close friends and acquaintances. Though these lists won't update themselves, this innovation means that you'll be able to view photos or posts from those you really care about while skimming over information from more distant connections. You'll only receive major news – like engagements – from those flagged as acquaintances.


Georgia has 3rd highest poverty rate among states

New Census data shows that Georgia's poverty rate was the third highest in the country in 2010, up two spots from last year, with more than 1.8 million residents counted among the poor.

The only states with higher poverty rates in 2010 were Louisiana and Mississippi. Nationally, 15.1 percent of Americans were living in poverty last year.

Georgia also ranked eighth in the nation in the number of uninsured residents, at a rate of 19.4 percent. Roughly 1.9 million Georgians did not have health insurance last year when the state joined a challenge to President Barack Obama's health care plan, meant in part to address rising numbers of people without health insurance.

SAT scores drop in Georgia, South Carolina, U.S.

More high school graduates are trying to go to college, if SAT results released Wednesday are any indication.
But that doesn’t necessarily mean more graduates are ready for college.

Across Georgia, South Carolina and the nation, 2011 high school graduates posted lower SAT scores on average than students who graduated a year earlier. On the other hand, no graduating class has ever had more students take the SAT than last year’s.


Ohio has country's 11th highest foreclosure rate

Ohio had one of the nation's highest foreclosure rates last month as banks stepped up their actions against homeowners behind on their mortgage payments.

Foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday that the number of U.S. homes that received an initial default notice - the first step in the foreclosure process - jumped 33 percent in August from July.

Six Things the Film Industry Doesn't Want You To Know About

You may already be a film industry cynic. Maybe you think Hollywood is a barren wasteland, devoid of creativity and originality. Maybe you’re sick of seeing talented people get ignored and vapid hacks get splashed all over the trades. Maybe you’re tired of 3D everything and having to re-buy your movies every five to ten years.

I’m not here to dissuade you of any of that. Hell no, I’m here to make it worse. Get ready, because this is some of the rottenest shit of which the film industry is capable. These are the things so terrible that Hollywood has to cover them up, lest God see their sin and smite them accordingly (and keep various government entities and lawyers off their backs, of course). If you still had any kind thoughts toward Hollywood, I suggest you prepare yourself for crushing disappointment.

NLRB costing South Carolina jobs

The National Labor Relations Board is alleging that Boeing violated labor laws by locating its new 787 Dreamliner facility in North Charleston, S.C. For years, Boeing has operated predominantly in Washington state, where it has invested billions of dollars and created thousands of jobs.


New local plant will provide 350 jobs 

South Carolina's top-flight aerospace team got a boost from a hometown player Wednesday when The InterTech Group Inc. announced its subsidiary's plans for a major manufacturing facility in North Charleston that would bring 350 jobs to a region hungry for employment and new investment.

10 Things Social Security Won't Tell You

The secret of bigger benefits, and the truth about the agency's bottom line.

A Social Security spokeswoman points out that interest income from the Treasury bonds held in the trust fund will allow it to keep growing until 2022 -- even if the agency has to siphon off some money to offset any shortages in tax revenue -- and won't be exhausted until 2036, when the first Gen Xers begin retiring. But that's already one year earlier than previous projections. After that, the agency says tax income under the current system will only cover about 75% of benefit payments through 2085.


Teachers Are Put to the Test

Teacher evaluations for years were based on brief classroom observations by the principal. But now, prodded by President Barack Obama's $4.35 billion Race to the Top program, at least 26 states have agreed to judge teachers based, in part, on results from their students' performance on standardized tests.

So with millions of teachers back in the classroom, many are finding their careers increasingly hinge on obscure formulas like the one that fills a whiteboard in an economist's office here.

FDA Slams 'Dr. Oz' for Apple Juice Report

Mehmet Oz, MD, the Columbia University thoracic surgeon who gained fame first in books and more recently with his syndicated television show, has run afoul of the Food and Drug Administration with his report about levels of arsenic in popular brands of apple juice.

The FDA called the report "irresponsible and misleading" and another TV doc, ABC's Richard Besser, MD, accused Oz of fear-mongering.

In a recent episode of The Dr. Oz Show, Oz reported that five brands of apple juice -- Minute Maid, Apple & Eve, Mott's, Juicy Juice, and Gerber -- all contained some level of arsenic and suggested that this was a cause for concern.

The show used an independent laboratory, EMSL Analytical, to test dozens of samples from three U.S. cities to compare the level of arsenic in the juices to the Environmental Protection Agency's safe standard for drinking water, less than 10 parts per billion.

At least one sample for four of the five brands -- excluding Minute Maid -- came in above that threshold. The highest level measured was in Gerber apple juice, at 36 ppb.

The segment earned a stiff rebuke from representatives of government, industry, and academia for causing unnecessary alarm, even before it aired.

Apple juice safe despite arsenic, FDA tells Dr. Oz

Dr. Donald Zink, senior science advisor at the agency's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, said on the site that arsenic occurs naturally in the environment and can be found in certain food products, including fruit juices and juice concentrates. But the agency says the levels are too low to pose a threat to human health.

Publisher's Note:

So, let me get this straight . . . 

Are all of these people upset with Dr. Oz because he informed the public that 'arsenic' IS indeed found in apple juice, or that he informed the public that arsenic is approved to be in apple juice by many overseeing agencies in our country?
 
So which is it?  I thought "Knowledge is Power?"  Oh, I see.  Knowledge is Power as long as no one else is knowledgeable about the power that is being wield by others.  I GOT IT!  Apparently, Dr. Oz got it also.     

A Must Read for ALL Women

Farrakhan: The Divine Value of the Female

 The enemy's aim has been to devalue the woman transforming her into a sexual plaything instead of treating her with the reverence and honor she deserves as a serious co-creator with God, said The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan in an important and sobering message delivered at Mosque Maryam, the international headquarters of the Nation of Islam.

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The upstairs section of Mosque Maryam was packed with women seeking guidance from the Minister. Photo: Courtney X. Powell
“No matter what your race, color or ethnicity, you have never looked at yourself as a part of The Divine. That will change today,” Min. Farrakhan told the packed auditorium and those viewing live Sept. 11 via internet webcast.

“God cannot make us the head if the woman is not lifted. If God does not lift the woman, the man will never come up, so if God is going to make a new world and a better world, He is going to make that world coming through a woman,” said Min. Farrakhan.
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Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan - News Press Conference re: Libya - March 31st, 2011

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