Feds Shut Down 26 Chinatown Bus Lines
Don't worry: Fung Wah and Lucky Star are OK
"We are not saying all of the discount curbside bus companies are bad," Schumer said. "It's a good industry."
Why You Should Tell Everyone Your Salary
Because transparency tends to breed fairness
Coming Soon: Contract-Free iPhone
Cricket to debut pre-paid version, but phone will cost you
Baltimore Student: I Ate Housemate's Heart, Brain
Motive unknown for Alexander Kinyua from Kenya
Trayvon Martin case
Judge orders Zimmerman back to jail
George Zimmerman was ordered back to jail on Friday for misleading the court about his access to an Internet fundraising account.Seminole County Circuit Court Judge Kenneth Lester revoked the bail for Zimmerman — who is facing a second-degree murder charge in the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin — after finding that Zimmerman and his wife concealed their access to a $200,000 account during a bond hearing in April.
Zimmerman, who was not present at Friday’s hearing, now must surrender to Seminole County sheriff’s deputies by Sunday.
Last Chance to View Transit of Venus on June 5
Two weeks after the stunning solar eclipse, Venus is scheduled to pass across the face of the sun on June 5, which NASA said will produce a silhouette "that no one alive today will likely see again."
Transits of Venus are very rare - they only occur twice every 120 years. The last time this happened was in 2004, and that was the first time that anyone alive at the time had ever witnessed it. If you miss it this time around, you're likely out of luck. The next transit of Venus is not expected until 2117.
The June 5 event, however, is expected to be widely visible. "Observers on seven continents, even a sliver of Antarctica, will be in position to see it," NASA said.
The seven-hour transit will begin at 3:09 p.m. PDT.
"The timing favors observers in the mid-Pacific where the sun is high overhead during the crossing," NASA said. "In the USA, the transit will be at its best around sunset. That's good, too. Creative photographers will have a field day imaging the swollen red sun 'punctured' by the circular disk of Venus."
As the planet passes in front of the sun, it will likely look like a small black dot. Like the solar eclipse, NASA warned enthusiasts not to stare directly at the sun. Something like a #14 welder's glass is an effective filter, and local astronomy clubs will likely have solar telescopes.
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U.S. job growth trips again, opens door to more Fed moves
U.S. job growth braked sharply for a third straight month in May and the unemployment rate rose for the first time in nearly a year, raising chances of further monetary stimulus from the Federal Reserve to support the sputtering recovery.
Employers added a paltry 69,000 jobs to their payrolls last month, the least since May of last year, and 49,000 fewer jobs were created in the previous two months than had been thought, the Labor Department said on Friday.
The report is troubling for President Barack Obama, whose prospects of winning re-election in November could hinge on the economy's health. Republican opponent Mitt Romney called the report "a harsh indictment" of Obama's policies.
Obama says could end Washington gridlock in second term
U.S. President Barack Obama told his supporters on Friday he could break Washington's gridlock in a second term, and pushed Congress to enact his "to-do list" prescriptions to heal the economy in spite of it being an election year.
At a political fundraiser in Minneapolis, Obama said that if he won re-election in November, Republicans in Congress who now oppose his every move would be more inclined to work with him.
"I believe if we are successful in this election - when we're successful in this election - that the fever may break," Obama told the campaign event.
"My hope and my expectation is that after the election - now that it turns out the goal of beating Obama doesn't make much sense because I'm not running again - that we can start getting some cooperation again," he said.
Work sharing: The way for states to reduce unemployment in the US
Individual US states should implement a 'work sharing' policy of reducing worker hours rather than laying them off.
Washington, DC - It is clear that we are not going to see any major action from the federal government to reduce unemployment any time soon. There is no hope that this Congress will support another round of stimulus and not much more hope from the next Congress, even if the Democrats somehow regain control.
What that means is that we are looking at a long, painfully slow recovery. Assuming that the economy continues to generate 200,000 jobs a month, roughly its average over the last three months, we will not get back to more normal levels of unemployment until somewhere near the end of the decade.
And it is certainly plausible that progress will be worse. That story assumes a recovery lasting for more than a decade, something the United States has never experienced.
This means that we should expect to see a labour market in which millions of workers will be unable to find jobs for long into the future. They will be unable to adequately support their families, and may even lose their homes, all because the folks in charge of running economic policy don't know what they are doing.
US unemployment drops to 8.2 per cent |
Work sharing, formally known as "short work", is an arrangement whereby employers reduce the hours of their existing work force instead of laying off workers. For example, if an employer was going to lay off 10 workers, she can instead have the same reduction in labour time by reducing the hours of 50 workers by 20 per cent.
Under the unemployment insurance system, workers would typically be entitled to roughly half of their pay if they were laid off. Under the short work system, the government would make up roughly half of the lost wages for workers who were put on short time. In this example, if their hours were cut back by 20 per cent, the government would make up half of the lost wages, or 10 per cent of their total wages. This leaves the worker earning 90 per cent of their former wages while working 80 per cent of the time.
Obama Order Sped Up Wave of Cyberattacks Against Iran
From his first months in office, President Obama secretly ordered increasingly sophisticated attacks on the computer systems that run Iran’s main nuclear enrichment facilities, significantly expanding America’s first sustained use of cyberweapons, according to participants in the program.Mr. Obama decided to accelerate the attacks — begun in the Bush administration and code-named Olympic Games — even after an element of the program accidentally became public in the summer of 2010 because of a programming error that allowed it to escape Iran’s Natanz plant and sent it around the world on the Internet. Computer security experts who began studying the worm, which had been developed by the United States and Israel, gave it a name: Stuxnet.
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